Daily Mail

Banned Stokes to miss Ashes

He’s suspended by England after Bristol brawl video

- By LAWRENCE BOOTH and RICHARD GIBSON

BEN STOKES’ hopes of playing in the Ashes appear to be over after he and Alex Hales were suspended by england following their part in Sunday night’s punch-up in Bristol.

The ECB banned the pair after reviewing footage of the incident that showed Stokes knocking a 27-year- old man to the ground during a brawl which left the man in hospital with facial injuries, and the england all-rounder with a broken finger.

Stokes is said to be devastated and has messaged team-mates to apologise. But there is concern about his fragile state of mind, with one senior england player telling Sportsmail: ‘I hope he gets through this.’

Stokes is set to lose his bat and kit deal with new Balance, thought to be worth around £200,000 a year, potentiall­y paving the way for other sponsors to pull out of existing deals.

England coach trevor Bayliss admitted the Stokes issue has been among the most difficult he has had to deal with. ‘It’s right up there, probably in the top two,’ said Bayliss, who was in the Sri Lankan team bus shot at by terrorists in Lahore in 2009, an attack that left six policemen and two civilians dead. ‘It’s

very difficult for everyone involved — something we hope we don’t go through again.’ Stokes and Hales must return to Bristol in the next seven days to be interviewe­d by Avon and Somerset Police under caution. Sources had initially depicted Hales as a peacemaker, but the video appears to show him kicking another man, who appears to be armed with a bottle but is lying by the kerb. Hales was not named in England’s 16-man touring party to Australia, but an ECB statement said he and Stokes would ‘not be considered for selection for England internatio­nal matches until further notice’. It means Hales misses today’s fifth and final one-day internatio­nal against West Indies in Southampto­n. Both Stokes and Hales will stay on full pay while the Board continue their internal investigat­ion into the incident outside Mbargo nightclub at 2.35am on Monday. The wording of the statement leaves the ECB with wriggle room ahead of the Test squad’s departure for Australia on October 28, but it seems inconceiva­ble that Stokes will be allowed to take part. Despite the seriousnes­s of the situation, Stokes received support from some former England players yesterday, including Graeme Swann, who tweeted: ‘If Stokes were your son you’d pat him on the head after seeing that video. End the

nonsense and let’s concentrat­e on the Ashes.’ Meanwhile, Stokes must wait to see if his other sponsorshi­p deals will be affected. A spokesman for Red Bull declined to comment on the grounds that the case was in the hands of the police, while currency specialist­s Centtrip, who sponsor Stokes’s bat, did not return calls. But London-based sports insurance experts Infinite Global warned: ‘This moment of madness could have a significan­t and long-lasting financial and reputation­al impact on the pair by way of potential lost sponsorshi­ps and contracts.’ There is also the matter of whether Stokes will be welcome at next year’s IPL, after he was signed for the 2017 edition by Rising Pune Supergiant for around £1.7million, a tournament record for a non-Indian. Pune are not set to feature in the 2018 tournament, however, and Indian insiders believe the auction for next year’s tournament, due to take place in February, is too far away to be affected by events in Bristol.

So short is his temper, that when Ben Stokes – English cricket’s answer to Superman – makes a rare low score with the bat or has an off-day with the ball, he has been known to damage his dressing-room locker.

Aware that the match-winning allrounder has a self- destructiv­e fuse, opponents goad him with insults designed to send him into a blind rage and put him off his game.

England’s team psychologi­st has tried everything to help Stokes keep his cool, the latest tactic being to urge him to slowly and methodical­ly pack every item of equipment in his kitbag on returning to the pavilion, in the hope that he might calm down during the ten minutes it takes to complete this laborious task.

According to those close to the flamehaire­d firebrand, whose thrillingl­y explosive playing style is comparable with that of the legendary Sir Ian Botham, it seemed to be working. In the early hours of Monday, however, when he became embroiled in a shameful street brawl, it appeared nothing would have stopped him in his tracks.

The behaviour of this 6ft colossus outside a Bristol nightclub – where he had been drinking with team-mates to celebrate a victory over the West Indies – was caught on a mobile phone video, obtained by a red-top newspaper.

The trouble began after Stokes and other England players went on a bar crawl in an area of Bristol thronging with students out for fun during ‘fresher’s week’ at the city’s university.

According to one witness, when the cricketer was drinking in a club called Mbargo he heard two gay men being insulted, and when he spoke out to defend them an argument broke out. At that point, no punches were thrown. But when Stokes and Hales left the

club, and by chance met the alleged abusers again in the street, a fight broke out.

Paying no heed to fellow England player Alex Hales, who was apparently trying to draw him away from trouble, and summoning the freakish strength that enables him to smite sixes over the grandstand roof, Stokes powered into action, striking what appeared to be a bottle from one man’s hand. The sound of shattering glass echoed around the deserted street.

Then, after an ugly pavement grapple, he got up, advanced on the second man, and floored him with one devastatin­g blow. By now the first man was backing away, but Stokes made for him in his bright white trainers and slapped him.

The video, apparently shot from a building overlookin­g the fracas, spans barely 60 seconds yet, according to a witness, the cricketer threw 15 punches. For Stokes, the England Test team and cricket as a whole – still regarded as a game played by gentlemen – the repercussi­ons of this

unedifying incident will be disastrous. Now 26 years old, and thought to have matured sufficient­ly to have been made England vice-captain, Stokes was held overnight in police cells. One of the two men needed hospital treatment for facial injuries.

In a few weeks, he was due to travel with the team to Australia for this winter’s Ashes series, yet if by then he faces trial for a potentiall­y imprisonab­le offence, it seems unthinkabl­e that the England management would allow him to board the plane.

Indeed, despite the suggestion­s Stokes might have been defending someone from homophobic abuse, his actions were so shocking that his place in the team must be in doubt, even if he is not charged.

The England and Wales Cricket Board, which yesterday suspended Stokes and Hales ‘until further notice’, will also want to know why the player – who once admitted losing count (at 20) of the number of ‘Jagerbomb’ shots he had drunk on a night out – was again out on the tiles.

HIS sponsors must also be deeply concerned. In addition to New Balance, he has a lucrative contract with Red Bull – deals which, together with the £1.7million he receives for playing in the Indian Premier League for just six weeks a year, and the £700,000 he is paid for representi­ng England – are estimated to boost his annual income to well over £3million.

Then there is his family. On October 14, Stokes is due to marry his fiancee, Clare Ratcliffe, 27, the mother of their infant children Layton and Libby, with whom he lives in his Durham mansion.

Miss Ratcliffe, from Somerset, met Stokes when she went to watch a cricket match, and he chatted her up whilst fielding on the boundary. Whether the wedding will now go ahead on schedule remains to be seen, but she is said to be ‘devastated’.

Following events from their home in New Zealand, his parents, former rugby league player and coach, Ged, and mother Deb – ironically a counsellor who works with victims of violent crime – must feel the same way. So, too, must the England selectors. For Stokes, whose astonishin­g feats include scoring the fastest 250-run innings in history, is their undisputed talisman – a player of such rare brilliance that he is capable of winning any match single-handedly, whether with bat, ball, or his extraordin­ary fielding.

If anyone is taking satisfacti­on from this saga, it can only be the Australian­s, who feared he would demolish them this winter – and whose players and supporters would no doubt jibe him mercilessl­y if he was to make the Ashes tour.

Stokes was described to me as a ‘ mildmanner­ed, kindly’ man when not in the heat of battle, and the first to lend his shoulder to team-mates with problems.

So what could be behind his confrontat­ional manner? The obvious place to look is his childhood. Though many England fans prefer to forget it, Stokes is actually a New Zealander by ancestry and birth. His red hair and freckles come from his father’s side of the family, but he also has Maori blood from his mother’s distant relatives – a connection of which he is proud enough to mark with a tattoo on his arm.

Born in Christchur­ch in June 1991, his mother’s work frequently took her away from home, so he spent much time with his father, a teak-tough rugby player so determined to get back into action after injuring a finger that he had it amputated at the knuckle rather than waiting for it to mend.

It was a streak his son inherited. When Stokes was 13, the family moved to the UK, where his father took a coaching job. They settled in the Cumbrian town of Cockermout­h, where he was teased for his accent and did not fare well academical­ly – leaving school with just two GCSEs – but earned popularity for his sporting heroics. Yet as a friend told me, ‘Trouble always seemed to follow him around, like a moth to a flame.’

In a school rugby match, an opposition player took such a dislike to him that he ran up and punched Stokes just as he was about to take a conversion kick. A melee ensued and the game was abandoned. He also broke his hand during a cricket match after an altercatio­n with the pavilion door.

That trouble continued after his career began. In 2013, when he toured Australia with the England Lions (effectivel­y, the national reserve team), Stokes and a teammate were flown home in disgrace after persistent late-night drinking. Ordering him to pack his bags, coach Andy Flower gave it to him straight: ‘You don’t want to play for England. You just want to p*** it up the wall with your mates and have a good time.’

Stokes, then 22, swore at him and vowed to prove him wrong. By dint of his ‘freakish’ talent, as the former England Michael Vaughan describes it, he has done so.

But the red mist has continued to descend at regular intervals. In 2014, when he fractured his wrist by smashing it into a dressing-room cupboard, after getting out for a duck in Barbados, team-mates nicknamed him ‘The Hurt Locker’.

Another unseemly confrontat­ion came after he was ‘sledged’ – the cricketing term for insulted out on the pitch – to breakingpo­int by the temperamen­tal West Indian player Marlon Samuels. When Stokes was bowled out, Samuels mocked him with a salute; Stokes squared up to him and let fly with a volley of abuse, and it seemed for an instant that blows might be exchanged.

We might have thought, for the sake of his career, that he would give up the booze – at least during the playing season – but no. Recklessly, during a recent interview with The Times magazine, he even admitted to drinking during a five-day Test match. ‘Why not? We’re grown men, go out for dinner, have a few pints,’ he said. ‘I’m 26, not 14. I don’t have to drink Diet Coke with dinner.’

WOULD anyone agree? Well, we might ask Botham, whose gargantuan appetite for red wine (not to mention cannabis and women) apparently did nothing to impair his fabled career.

And also Freddie Flintoff, suspended and stripped of the vice- captaincy after a drunken night out in St Lucia at the Cricket World Cup, which culminated in him being rescued from a capsized pedal-boat.

Of course, even these other larger-thanlife England stars were never involved in scrapes like this. Yet a source who knows them all says there is something in the DNA of the great all-rounder that means they are constantly teetering on the edge of danger.

‘If you have this enormous, testostero­nefuelled drive that gives you the ability to crash, bash and destroy on the cricket field, then it is nigh-on impossible to switch it on and off at will, and it can also be enormously self-destructiv­e,’ says the insider, who asked not to be named. ‘When he’s on the field, Ben Stokes sees it as his job to destroy everyone who stands in his path and he does it with ruthless efficiency.

‘When you look at that video, I think he had gone into the same mind-set. He looked like he does when he’s battling it out for England, and he has to be the last man standing. That’s not to excuse his behaviour, but it might explain it.’

Perhaps so. But for his own sake, and that of the sport he dominates, we must hope this is the last we see of Ben Stokes in this kind of incident.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Double top: Theo Walcott (right) enjoys his second goal
GETTY IMAGES Double top: Theo Walcott (right) enjoys his second goal
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Video footage: One of the men involved in the altercatio­n begins to swing a bottle, circled, in the middle of the road at 2.35am on Monday BOTTLE ATTACKER STOKES
Video footage: One of the men involved in the altercatio­n begins to swing a bottle, circled, in the middle of the road at 2.35am on Monday BOTTLE ATTACKER STOKES
 ??  ?? Backing off: As the two men walk away from the 26-year-old, Stokes keeps heading towards them despite an attempt to hold him back STOKES
Backing off: As the two men walk away from the 26-year-old, Stokes keeps heading towards them despite an attempt to hold him back STOKES
 ??  ?? Tussle: After the man falls to the ground, Stokes attempts to carry on grappling with him while a second man tries to pull the cricketer away SMASHED BOTTLE STOKES
Tussle: After the man falls to the ground, Stokes attempts to carry on grappling with him while a second man tries to pull the cricketer away SMASHED BOTTLE STOKES
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Punches thrown: Ben Stokes, in a green T-shirt, steps up to one of the men and swings his fist Scuffle: They move into the middle of the road as Stokes keeps throwing punches Right hook: Stokes throws another punch, hitting the man in the face Floored: A minute after the altercatio­n began, the man is left flat out in the road with Stokes standing over him STOKES STOKES STOKES STOKES
Punches thrown: Ben Stokes, in a green T-shirt, steps up to one of the men and swings his fist Scuffle: They move into the middle of the road as Stokes keeps throwing punches Right hook: Stokes throws another punch, hitting the man in the face Floored: A minute after the altercatio­n began, the man is left flat out in the road with Stokes standing over him STOKES STOKES STOKES STOKES

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom