The Herald on Sunday

Stokes fired up after ‘benchmark’ victory

England captain hails return to winning ways

- RORY DOLLARD

ENGLAND captain Ben Stokes praised his side for producing a “benchmark” performanc­e that swept South Africa aside inside three days at Emirates Old Trafford.

Stokes started his reign with four adrenaline-fuelled run chases against New Zealand and India before crashing back to earth with a thumping defeat by the Proteas at Lord’s last week.

England got themselves back to winning ways in Manchester, knocking over the tourists for 151 and 179 to triumph by an innings and 85 runs with two days to spare.

Despite the bruising nature of the result it was a performanc­e that required more determinat­ion and more nuance than the tub-thumping thrillers that lit up the early part of the summer.

Ben Foakes knuckled down for a determined century, with Stokes also digging deep in the early stages of his first ton as skipper, while Zak Crawley shelved his natural attacking instincts to survive an important passage on the first evening.

Their collective resolve was tested again on Saturday as Keegan Petersen and Rassie van der Dussen defied them in a frustratin­g 43-over stand before an inspired double strike from Stokes ended their resistance.

“I think what we did incredibly well was assess that we didn’t feel this was a wicket where we could go out and play in the way that we’ve spoken about,” he said. “Cricket is about how you bat, bowl and field and I think that the way we batted, bowled and fielded this whole game is the benchmark of the standards we’ve set. I think that is real progress for the side.

“It didn’t feel like a wicket where you could stand there and hit through the line because of the variable bounce that it was offering.

“It was an amazing team performanc­e all round.”

Despite Stokes’ eagerness to share the plaudits – he suggested Foakes should have won his player of the match award and made a point of drawing attention to Crawley’s low-key 38 – he could not hide from his own role at the heart of the victory.

Having already played his part with the bat he stepped up to wreck South Africa’s resistance as he dismissed the determined fourth-wicket pair of Petersen and Van der Dussen in the middle of an exhausting 14-over spell deep into the second innings.

Where most cricketers would have happily settled in and waited for the new ball, which later brought a clatter of five wickets in 30 deliveries from James Anderson and Ollie Robinson, he demanded more from himself and got it.

“When you are bowling with the older ball, when nothing is really happening, you have to create your own energies and own theatre around that,” he explained. “It’s something I’ve done over my career with the older ball, just to try and run in and hit the wicket as hard as I can to try and make something out of nothing.”

He signed off with a nod to the hometown hero, Anderson, whose name reverberat­ed around his home ground throughout the Test. At the age of 40 he ticked off another page in the record books, taking Glenn McGrath’s title as the most prolific fast bowler in internatio­nal cricketing history. He finished with match figures of six for 62 and now has 951 scalps across all formats.

“He’s a testament to himself and a great ambassador for the game,” said Stokes.

 ?? ?? England captain Ben Stokes celebrates after taking the wicket of Rassie van der Dussen
England captain Ben Stokes celebrates after taking the wicket of Rassie van der Dussen

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