The Guardian (USA)

Lure of World Cup defence could tempt Ben Stokes out of ODI retirement

- Ali Martin in Rawalpindi

Ben Stokes has hinted at a possible reversal of his retirement from one-day cricket after an admission that the World Cup defence in India next year is tempting.

Stokes called time on his 50-over career in July, citing the additional responsibi­lities of Test captaincy and a bulging schedule that has made it “unsustaina­ble” for the 31-year-old allrounder to represent his country and give 100% in all three formats.

However, a leading role in England’s recent T20 World Cup triumph in Australia not only furthered his reputation as a matchwinne­r but, coming after a 12-month absence from that format, suggested his dropping in solely for tournament cricket is workable. Jos Buttler, the white-ball captain, would certainly welcome such a return. Rob Key, England’s director of men’s cricket, tried to float the possibilit­y as England prepared for their Test tour of Pakistan in Abu Dhabi last week and, though rebuffed at the time, it appears the door is not necessaril­y double-bolted.

“Keysy pulled me to the side in the

UAE and as soon as he said the words ‘50-over World Cup’ I just walked away,” said Stokes in the buildup to the first Test in Rawalpindi, the start of which may be delayed after a number of the tourists were laid low by a virus.

“At the moment, being out here, my focus is solely on this series. But it’s one of those things. Who knows how I might feel towards a World Cup at the time? Going to a World Cup is an amazing thing to do, to represent your country.”

As it stands, Stokes faces a lopsided 2023 – seven months of intense action followed by five that are sparse. After Pakistan comes a two-Test series in New Zealand in February, followed by the Indian Premier League – a tournament for which Stokes will put his name forward after missing this year’s edition.

Once back from the IPL in late May, Stokes would head straight into captaining a one-off, four-day Test against Ireland at Lord’s from 1 June and then the small matter of a compact five-Test Ashes series that runs until 30 July.

Thereafter, with England focusing on 50-over cricket before the World Cup starts in October, things thin out for Stokes, with four Twenty20s against New Zealand at the end of the home summer and a five-match T20 series in the Caribbean in December.

It may be that the strains of being an all-rounder – not least a longstandi­ng knee problem – and Test captaincy means this period of extended rest is required; the lure of defending the title he helped secure in 2019 may yet override this.

 ?? Photograph: Matthew Lewis/Getty Images ?? Ben Stokes said in July that playing all three formats as well as being Test captain was unsustaina­ble.
Photograph: Matthew Lewis/Getty Images Ben Stokes said in July that playing all three formats as well as being Test captain was unsustaina­ble.

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