The Scotsman

Stokes wants to be remembered for future achievemen­ts

- CLIVE WELLINGTON

By Ben Stokes is focusing on his future with England as he bids to leave off-field issues behind him.

It has been 13 months since the all-rounder was arrested after a night out in Bristol and two months since he was found not guilty of affray, but the unhappy chapter is not yet fully closed.

Both he and team-mate Alex Hales face a cricket discipline commission hearing in December, charged with bringing the game into disrepute, and only after that can he truly move on.

The incident has already taken a profession­al toll – causing him to miss last winter’s Ashes tour as well as a Test against India this summer – and Stokes is desperate to draw a line in the sand.

“Look, it’s all about looking forward now. Looking at things that went on is not the way I like to think about things,” he said in a rare media appearance. “It’s all about looking to the future. Everything I do from here onwards is what people will hopefully remember. That’s what I’m trying to do.

“We’ve got a huge summer coming up with the Ashes and the World Cup so I’m fully focused on that.”

Asked about the CDC hearing, which will take place in London on 5 and 7 December, he added: “I’m totally focused on cricket now. With such a big summer coming up, there’s other things on my mind that take precedence over that.”

For now, the task at hand involves regaining momentum on the tour of Sri Lanka. England have already won the one-day leg 3-1, but lost the closing match by the heavy margin of 219 runs on Duckworth-lewis-stern.

Today’s one-off Twenty20 in Colombo represents a chance for the white-ball side to reassert themselves and Stokes is eager to grasp it.

“It was a wake-up in that last game, the way Sri Lanka came out,” he said. “I don’t recall the last time we were hit for 360 as a bowling unit or played so poorly with the bat. It was a big learning curve.”

 ??  ?? Ben Stokes: CDC hearing.
Ben Stokes: CDC hearing.

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