Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

STOKES CENTURY

LEADS ENGLAND TO ASHES-SAVING WIN

- AFP -

Ben Stokes was the hero yet again as his incredible unbeaten century helped England to a thrilling onewicket win in the third Ashes Test at Headingley yesterday. England - all out for a woeful 67 in their first innings - were 286 for nine, still needing 73 more runs to reach a victory target of 359 when bespectacl­ed number 11 Jack Leach walked out to bat to join Stokes at the crease.

Leach, however, held firm with World Cup final winning batting star Stokes’s astonishin­g 135 not out seeing England complete their highest successful fourth innings chase as they squared the five-match series at 1-1.

Australia, who would have retained the Ashes had they won, missed a clear chance to run Leach out when Nathan Lyon failed to gather a throw and then paid dearly for squanderin­g a review.

All-rounder Stokes eventually flayed fast bowler Pat Cummins for four to seal a famous victory arguably even more improbable than England’s celebrated 1981 Ashes Test success at Headingley when they won after following-on.

This was only the fourth time a team had made

more than 300 to win in the fourth innings of a Test at Headingley.

As Leach looked on, all-rounder Stokes went into one-day mode by driving off-spinner Lyon for two straight sixes and then produced a stunning reverse against him that sailed high over deep point.

Stokes’s extravagan­t scooped six off Cummins reduced the target to 40.

Despite Australia Captain Tim Paine having scattered all his fielders to the boundary, Stokes pulled Josh Hazlewood for four to complete a remarkable 199 ball-century - his second in a row after his 115 not out in the drawn second Test at Lord’s - featuring eight fours and five sixes. Stokes then hoisted the next two balls for six. He rode his luck when a sliced two off Cummins was dropped by a diving Marcus Harris at third man. Stokes, however, commanding­ly pulled and drove Cummins’s next two balls for for four to leave England just nine runs shy of victory.

But a single left Leach on strike with two balls left in the over.

The first of those sailed over Leach’s head and the next saw Australia waste a review for

a ball that pitched outside leg stump. England now needed eight - or two boundaries - as Stokes faced Leach.

The third ball of the over saw Stokes drive Lyon for a six that just cleared Marnus Labuschagn­e at long-on and England needed two to win.

A colossal mix-up between Stokes and Leach should have seen the number 11 run out but Lyon fumbled the return.

Lyon then had an lbw appeal against Stokes turned down by Umpire Joel Wilson only for replays to suggest it would have been out. But Australia had used up all their reviews. England still needed two to win but Leach, who made a career best 92 as night-watchman in a recent Test win over Ireland, was on strike to Cummins.

Leach though managed a single that tied the scores as he got off the mark after 59 minutes at the crease.

And Stokes then cut Cummins for a boundary to seal an astounding triumph.

The left-handed batsman faced 219 balls in total, with 11 fours and eight sixes in a superbly paced five-and-a-half hour innings.

 ??  ?? Ben Stokes celebrates
Ben Stokes celebrates

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