The Daily Telegraph - Sport

Inside story of Stokes’ amazing return – and moment he knew comeback was on

Two operations and a mental health battle preceded stunning recovery which has transforme­d England’s hopes for the Ashes

- By Nick Hoult CHIEF CRICKET CORRESPOND­ENT

It was when Ben Stokes was watching Doug Campbell, one of the country’s leading hand and finger specialist­s, perform a second operation on his left index finger that he knew he would be playing cricket again soon.

Stokes, thanks to a local anaestheti­c, was able to see in detail the work being performed on his finger, which had been badly broken taking a catch to dismiss Chris Gayle in Rajasthan Royals’ opening match of the Indian Premier League season in Mumbai on April 12. It had not healed properly after the first operation, carried out two weeks after he sustained the injury, and caused him “unbelievab­le pain” when he returned to action too early.

Being a team man, he was unable to say no when Durham asked him to play in July and then England came calling when the one-day squad were isolated by a Covid-19 outbreak. Stokes captained England in a three-match series against Pakistan and knew his finger was in a bad way. Movement in the joint was so limited he feared the injury would be career-ending. His mental health spiralled downwards as a result, and in July it was announced that he would be taking an indefinite break from cricket.

The idea that Stokes – the cricketing superhero who had won England the World Cup and played the greatest Ashes innings of them all in the same summer in 2019 – could be susceptibl­e to psychologi­cal distress sent shockwaves through sport. Players realised that if it could happen to him, then it could happen to them.

But it was also true that Stokes was subject to very specific circumstan­ces. He had not been able to properly grieve for the death of his father, Ged, from brain cancer last year: he did manage to return to New Zealand in time to see him before he passed away, but not before having to undergo two weeks of hard quarantine in Christchur­ch. Ged died on Dec 8 and Stokes had little time to mourn before returning to the England set-up for a tough tour of India.

Yet those close to Stokes always felt his mental state was primarily wrapped up in the pain from his finger. He knew the first operation had not gone well and became very down at not being able to do the

things that had come so naturally. He tried to lose himself in other projects – an esports gaming business called 4Cast that he had set up with Stuart Broad and Jofra Archer – but all the while he was growing frustrated and worried about his finger and the pain it was causing.

With rehab not working, some of his team-mates and those within the England set-up had written Stokes off for the Ashes, with some even suggesting he might not be playing again until next summer.

A scan was ordered, which showed up more scar tissue than expected. It is understood the ligament in the hand had become attached to some of that scar tissue, which is why Stokes had such limited movement. A new operation was booked in with the same surgeon at a private hospital in Leeds on Oct 4. The ligament was freed from the scar tissue and screws removed.

Stokes reported feeling better as soon as the anaestheti­c wore off. That day he was able to clench his fist for the first time. His mood lifted and two days later he emerged in public for the first time, posting a picture on Instagram with his wife, Clare, at Seaham Hall country house in County Durham, surrounded by pumpkins at a Hallowe’en display.

The only clue as to what had happened was a big plaster on his left index finger. The England and Wales Cricket Board later admitted in a statement that Stokes had been operated on for the second time and would “undergo an intensive period of rehabilita­tion for the next four weeks under the supervisio­n of the ECB’S medical team”.

A week later Stokes had a bat in hand and was hitting balls very gently in the nets at Durham. “Great to be back hitting balls,” he posted as he built up his return.

At the end of last week he was back in business, hitting balls properly, padded up and looking as if he was ready to play. It was a remarkably quick turnaround. England were cognisant of the fact that he could just be going through a mental high after so many low weeks and wanted to be certain of his frame of mind before adding him to the squad.

Chris Silverwood, the head coach, spoke to Stokes at the end of last week and then again at the weekend to make sure he was OK. Stokes had another net and was happy with his finger. He told Silverwood: “I am ready, if you want me.”

Silverwood did not need a second invitation, and suddenly the whole complexion of the Ashes series had been turned on its head.

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 ?? ?? Bombshell: Ben Stokes’s return for the Ashes is big news in the Australian press
Bombshell: Ben Stokes’s return for the Ashes is big news in the Australian press

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