The Scotsman

Stokes and Hales to face discipline tribunal over nightclub incident

● Hearing at end of Sri Lanka tour and before England fly to the West Indies

- By RORY DOLLARD

Ben Stokes and Alex Hales have been charged with bringing the game into disrepute by theengland­andwalescr­icket Board and will face a disciplina­ry hearing in December.

An independen­t Cricket Discipline Commission was tasked with leading an internal investigat­ion into an incident involving the England pair outside a Bristol nightclub in September last year.

Stokes denied a charge of affray and was cleared following a seven-day trial at Bristol Crown Court last month.

However, the all-rounder and Hales will have to answer to two counts of breaching ECB Directive 3.3, which states: “No participan­t may conduct themself in a manner or do any act or omission at any time which may be prejudicia­l to the interests of cricket or which may bring the ECB, the game of cricket or any cricketer or group of cricketers into disrepute.”

The CDC, which has the remit to impose penalties including an unlimited fine or suspension and terminatio­n of registrati­on, ruled the disciplina­ry panel hearings will be held in London on Wednesday 5 December and Friday 7 December.

Former Derbyshire cricketer Tim O’gorman will chair the three-person panel, which also contains ex-england

0 England all rounder Ben Stokes, left, and opening batsman Alex Hales will face an independen­t Cricket Discipline Commission.

and Gloucester­shire left-arm seamer Mike Smith.

The disciplina­ry inquiry was shelved until the conclusion of criminal proceeding­s against Stokes, with Hales not charged, following a late-night street brawl which took place midway through a one-day series against the West Indies.

Neither man featured in the final two ODIS, while Stokes missed the entirety of last winter’s tour of Australia, including the Ashes, due to the police investigat­ion that was ongoing at the time. Stokes returned to action on the New Zealand tour but missed the second Specsavers Test against India at Lord’s this summer due to a clash with his trial.

It is unknown whether being

absent from England duty as a knock-on effect of the night in question will be taken into account if sanctions are imposed.

The December dates fall between this winter’s tours of Sri Lanka and the West Indies, and Stokes and Hales are both available for selection as England prepare to name their limited-overs squads for the latter trip.

The party will be national selector Ed Smith’s first overseas pick since taking the reins earlier this year but, while he has shown a tendency for bold calls in the Test arena, the limited-overs group is much better settled.

With the World Cup in England next summer, the emphasis

is likely to be more on reinforcin­g that group and tinkering with roles in different conditions than any radical rethinks.

Eoin Morgan’s men will play five one-day internatio­nals in October, followed by a solitary Twenty20 on the island.

Moeen Ali and Adil Rashid will travel as first-choice spinners, with helpful pitches in Sri Lanka meaning they could be joined by a third – with Hampshire’s Liam Dawson considered a safe pair of hands.

Lancashire’s up-and-coming leg-spinner Matt Parkinson will also have warranted discussion but, if he gets a chance, it may be in the standalone 20-over clash.

The same could be true of

Pat Brown, the 20-year-old Worcesters­hire seamer who excelled on Vitality Blast Finals Day and finished as the country’s top short-form wicket-taker this year with 31.

David Willey is one major injury doubt due to the back injury which brought an early end to his season with Yorkshire. That could open the door for Sam Curran, who is close to a like-for-like replacemen­t as a left-arm seamer and talented batsman.

Senior paceman Liam Plunkett has also had injury problems and a judgement will be made whether to keep the door open for the 33-year-old to play some part in the latter stages of the tour or leave him out entirely to regain fitness.

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