The Herald - Herald Sport

Stokes masterclas­s pulls England level

- RORY DOLLARD

HEADINGLEY hero Ben Stokes revelled in one of the greatest innings of all time after coming up trumps in the fiercest of pressure situations once again to keep England’s Ashes dream alive.

Barely a month on from inspiring England to victory in the World Cup final, Stokes’ 135 not out ushered the hosts to a record fourth-innings chase of 359 with one wicket to spare in a nerve-shredding climax to the third Ashes Test.

Australia looked to be on the verge of retaining the urn after reducing England to 286 for nine but an unforgetta­ble last wicket union between Stokes and Jack Leach - who contribute­d one in an unbroken 76-run partnershi­p - altered the course of the series, at least for now.

No lesser authoritie­s than Geoffrey Boycott, Michael Vaughan and Sir Alastair Cook were queuing up to hail Stokes’ knock as the best in history by an Englishman.

Stokes said: “I’m obviously over the moon that we’ve managed to stay in the series. We knew if we lost this game then the Ashes were gone.

“When a number 11 comes out needing 70 to win, I knew what I had to do in terms of the game situation. The only time I started to get a little bit nervous or panicking was when we got into single figures.

“To be sat here, especially after getting bowled out for 67 [in the first innings], to still be in with a chance of getting the urn back is an amazing feeling.

“Walking off there at the end when the whole of Headingley was standing up and celebratin­g was a very special moment and something I had to try to take because moments like that don’t along very often.”

Stokes, who admitted his day was “certainly close” to topping what happened at the World Cup, went to stumps on Saturday evening on two not out from 50 balls, as he and captain Joe Root defied Australia in a punishing final session.

Asked about what he did overnight, Stokes replied: “My wife and kids came down and they got there at around 10 o’clock. My wife walked into me eating pasta in my boxer shorts!

“Last night, I think had a knock-off Nandos and two bars of Yorkie biscuit and raisin. And a couple of coffees in the morning.”

Stokes started with circumspec­tion on Sunday but gradually moved through the gears as he ran out of partners, teeing off once Leach was at the crease to finish with 11 fours and eight sixes. i n come

There were two major slices of fortune towards a breathtaki­ng finale as, first, Nathan Lyon fumbled the ball when Leach was backing up down the track with two runs required. He was sent back and only made his ground because the off-spinner could not cleanly gather the throw.

Stokes said: “I think Jack Leach must somehow have been watching Monty Panesar at Cardiff. I could not believe when I looked up. Me and Leachy could have had a conversati­on he was that close to me.

“That was huge panic stations there because he was so far out. Obviously in that pressure situations in games cam really affect what a human does. Nine times out of 10 Nathan Lyon would pick that ball up and take the stumps off.”

From the very next delivery, Stokes was rapped on the pad by Lyon but Australia’s desperate pleas for umpire Joel Wilson to raise his finger were ignored. Australia had burned their last remaining review in the previous over, meaning the decision stood.

Stokes added: “I knew it wasn’t out against Jack Leach. I have seen the DRS on my lbw shout, which obviously shows up with three reds, but DRS has got that completely wrong, as it flicked my front pad first and didn’t spin. “It shows how crucial it is to make sure you use your reviews. When you get to a situation like that, you still need one. If they had one they would have used it and ended up winning.”

Moments like that don’t come along very often

 ??  ?? Ben Stokes’ 135 not out handed England a dramatic win in the third Ashes Test
Ben Stokes’ 135 not out handed England a dramatic win in the third Ashes Test
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