Sunderland Echo

Stokes dismisses captaincy talk and is fully behind Root

- By Rory Dollard nep.sport@jpimedia.co.uk

Ben Stokes has thrown his support behind Joe Root’s England captaincy, claiming he has no aspiration to replace him in the top job.

When Root leads the side out in Sydney on Wednesday he will become the longestser­ving Test skipper in the country’s history, overtaking predecesso­r Sir Alastair Cook’s previous record of 59 matches.

But any sense of pride in that achievemen­t will be tempered by the fact that, for the third time, he has just led an unsuccessf­ul Ashes campaign. After a 4-0 defeat in 2017/18 and a 2-2 draw at home in 2019, he now finds his side 3-0 down and hoping simply to avert a whitewash.

After four and a half years in the job, it would hardly be classed as a radical move if either Root or his employers decided it was time for a change.

Neither party has given any indication that they are about to pull the trigger on such a move and now vice-captain Stokes, by any reckoning the only obvious replacemen­t, has distanced himself from any talk of succession planning.

He has led the Test team once before, in a losing cause against the West Indies when Root was at the birth of his second child, but does not covet the role.

“I’ve never really had an

ambition to be a captain,” he said, addressing the speculatio­n.

“Captaincy is more than about setting fields, picking the team, making decisions out there in the middle. A captain is someone you want to go out and play for. Joe Root is someone I always want to play for.

“It’s totally Joe’s decision. He shouldn’t be forced into doing it. I’m sure Cooky felt the same way. He did it for so long and when he knew his time was up, his time was up. Those discussion­s haven’t entered

anywhere near Joe yet.

“I don’t sense that at all with Joe. He’s brought this team a long way. He’s done some great things. Obviously this series hasn’t gone too well, not from a captaincy point of view, but from a team and results point of view.”

Stokes also used his considerab­le position of influence to firm up head coach Chris Silverwood’s position. There is a sense that he is a likelier fall guy than Root when post mortem concludes, but Stokes went out of his way to counter that narrative.

“Unfortunat­ely, the captain and coach bear the scrutiny for (results), but there are 10 other guys out there in the field,” he said.

“That’s (the media’s) job, to say, ‘Should people step down?’. At the end of the day, the most important people’s opinions are those guys in the dressing room and they’ve got our thorough support.

“Chris Silverwood, exactly the same. He’s a real players’ coach. He stands up for you as individual­s and players as well. All the hype in the media recently about their futures, it’s your job to write that, but they know full well they have the support of everyone in there and that’s all that matters.”

Stokes’ participat­ion in the Ashes was uncertain for a long time, as he took a hiatus from the game to focus on his mental health and recovery from a finger injury.

His return to the fold provided a huge psychologi­cal lift for the squad, but his on-field performanc­es have been by his own assessment “pretty average”.

 ?? ?? England’s Ben Stokes looks dejected during day one of the third Ashes test at the Melbourne Cricket Ground.
England’s Ben Stokes looks dejected during day one of the third Ashes test at the Melbourne Cricket Ground.
 ?? ?? England’s Joe Root ahead of a nets session at the Sydney Cricket Ground.
England’s Joe Root ahead of a nets session at the Sydney Cricket Ground.
 ?? ?? England Coach Chris Silverwood.
England Coach Chris Silverwood.

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