Stokes is a destiny man who loomed over Lord’s like the angel of the north | Barney Ronay

A picture


The England captain can realistically set his sights on winning the series against India, then the Ashes“I’m not tired.I’m not tired.I’m not tired.” Really, Ben? Really? Well, you’re pretty much on your own in that case old boy, after a day where simply watching Ben Stokes being Ben Stokes felt like a full contact sport, psychodrama, soap opera, and in its stickiest moments like a man engaged in an act of public self‑medication by Test cricket.This fifth day at Lord’s was entirely dominated by Stokes, who loomed over it like the angel of the north, arms outspread, another note in his own extraordinary sporting life.

It was shortly after midday that Stokes came running through at the end of his eighth successive over from the Nursery End to talk to the batter Nitish Kumar Reddy, to tell him, specially, that he wasn’t tired – hyped and pumped, eyes boggled, drawing boos from the largely Indian crowd,India were 101 for seven at that point and losing the game at a steady stagger,As Stokes wheeled in, drop-in tresses flowing behind him (colour range: Nordic God), it seemed likely the defining image of the day would be that beautifully desiccated fifth‑day pitch in midday sunlight, scratched, marked, bruised, as weathered and handsome as Stokes himself,Except of course Test cricket will only ever move at its own pace,By the time the final wicket fell almost five hours later, with the lights now dimming a little, Stokes could only stare up at the skies from his position at long‑on as the entire England team ran to deep point behind Shoaib Bashir, a perfect tableau of joy, relief and exhaustion.

India had clung on in the hours in between with wonderful skill and courage, scoring at one an over, patting out the dots, as the day settled into a kind of fever dream, a march through the desert.There were moments where it was hard to remember a time before this, a time when Stokes wasn’t bowling from both ends simultaneously.This is just life now.Ben Stokes is bowling at Lord’s.Ben Stokes will always be bowling at Lord’s.

In between he kept on doing all the other things, captaining, cheerleading, talking endlessly, walking back all the way to the end of his mark with Jofra Archer.Some people have main character energy.Stokes has all the other energies too, supporting actor, romantic lead, good guy, villain, extra, best boy, executive producer.It is extraordinary to watch him in this environment now, coming towards the necessary end of a vivid personal era.For all the occasional comic oddities of Bazball, this has always come from a place of love, passion and cinematic personal obsession.

England captains of the past have often been a little mardy and pinched, doggedly seeing this out,Stokes just loves it,He’s a destiny man,He lives this thing, and does it generously too, inviting you in to spectate,Even the line about not being tired is a peek into the mantras of the Bazball dressing room (never say you’re tired, low, hurt: bad voodoo spreads bad voodoo).

It is a level of commitment that can teeter close to mania, and did so here as India clung on,Stokes bowled 24 overs in this second innings, twice as many as Chris Woakes, a feat of endurance that will put a huge strain on his body,At the afternoon drinks break he called the team together and delivered an inspirational speech,Presumably that speech ran: I’m going to bowl for ever now,That’s the plan: me.

There was logic here.Stokes was the senior bowler in many ways.He has played more Tests than the entire attack put together.He bowled brilliantly, too.It was Stokes who finally induced Jasprit Bumrah to spoon a slog to mid-on to take India to 147 for eight and push the 2-1 series lead into sight.

Sign up to The SpinSubscribe to our cricket newsletter for our writers' thoughts on the biggest stories and a review of the week’s actionafter newsletter promotionThis is a point of high jeopardy for Stokes, for the Project, for his own era.Win this series, then win the Ashes.It is far from impossible.At which point Stokes gets to ride off into his own maniacally febrile retirement as a genuinely great England captain.This Test was proof of something else, too.

Stokes may be 34 and held together with brown string, but he still has the moments in him.He is perhaps a better bowler now than at any stage.Here he was touching 89mph in his seventh over.He got the key wicket of KL Rahul early on with a ball that zinged up the slope (there is no slope: I, Ben Stokes, am the slope) and was given lbw on review after an appeal that seemed to be based on the poster for the movie Platoon: full starfish, on his knees, roaring into the hail of machine‑gun fire.It even felt right that the final wicket should fall to Bashir, a Stokes project, injured and a little underdone, but wheeled back out here at just the right moment for some personal redemption.

This is the best part of Stokes, his emotional connection to the team and to English cricket; the ability to talk about things like depression and mental health, the struggles of life, even in the middle of his own very alpha sporting success, a genuinely rare kind of public candour,This series can still head either way from here just as Stokes himself must now see what exactly the rigours of those five days have done to his joints,But this was another one of his special days, another note in that examination of the far extremes of character and will that only Test cricket can really give,
sportSee all
A picture

Daniel Dubois: ‘That first fight against Usyk is behind me – I’m a man of the future’

The IBF champion on flying under the radar, Oleksandr Usyk’s weaknesses and how past defeats have steeled him “It’s definitely the biggest fight of my life,” Daniel Dubois says of his world heavyweight title unification bout against Oleksandr Usyk at Wembley Stadium on Saturday night before, following a slightly deflated pause, he highlights an unusually downbeat buildup. “It’s strange but it feels like it’s been going under the cover, like it hasn’t been really hyped‑up as I would have thought a unification fight will be. But maybe that will pick up on the night.”Sitting in the July sunshine outside his gym in Borehamwood, with the Wembley arch clearly visible through the haze of heat, Dubois looks a little hurt when I ask if he can explain why there has been such limited fanfare around an interesting rematch between two contrasting heavyweights who own all the world titles between them. “I’m not sure,” Dubois says in his role as the IBF champion

A picture

England beat India by 22 runs in Lord’s thriller: third men’s cricket Test, day five – as it happened

Time to wrap things up here. Ali’s first hit is in, with more coverage to follow. India have been excellent across three Tests and somehow find themselves 2-1 down. It’ll be pretty special if we go to the Oval at 2-2. Anyway, I’m getting ahead of myself

A picture

England triumph in final-day Lord’s thriller as India fall short despite Jadeja heroics

Exactly six years on from the barest of margins, another deflection sent a Lord’s epic England’s way. An intense battle of wills ended at 4.54pm on the final day when Mohammed Siraj, India’s No 11, thought he had repelled some extra bounce from Shoaib Bashir, only for the ball to trickle back on to the stumps and dislodge a bail.It was a galling way for Shubman Gill’s touring side to lose this third Test by just 22 runs and go 2-1 down in the series; a mixture of relief and jubilation for Ben Stokes and the hosts. Much like the World Cup final here in 2019, England got over the line on a humdinger of a day that at the same time very nearly broke them

A picture

McIlroy vows ‘the story isn’t over’ as he revels in Royal Portrush support at the Open

Rory McIlroy has promised to revel in the Northern Irish love during the Open Championship this week, with the 36-year-old also warning fellow competitors that he has regained focus after claiming the Masters in April. “The story certainly isn’t over,” he insisted.McIlroy has returned to Royal Portrush for the first time since 2019, when he admitted the scale of ovation on the Open’s first tee contributed to him whacking his ball out of bounds. He later missed the cut.Attention in the coming days promises to be even more intense, given his Masters win meant he became only the sixth golfer in history to complete a career grand slam

A picture

Sinner’s Wimbledon focus was unblinking on every point – Alcaraz is playing catch-up | Tumaini Carayol

With his hopes of a third consecutive Wimbledon title fading desperately with every point, Carlos Alcaraz sat in his chair on Centre Court after conceding the third set of his final with Jannik Sinner and unloaded his thoughts on his team: “From the back of the court, he is much better than me. Much better than me! Much [better]! It’s like this,” Alcaraz said, gesturing with his hands to demonstrate the vast gap between his greatest rival and himself.His assessment was not wrong. From a set down, Sinner put together a supreme performance to overturn five consecutive defeats against Alcaraz and win his first Wimbledon title, avenging the most difficult loss in his career – his French Open final defeat by Alcaraz in June – at the earliest opportunity.No one in the world strikes the ball with anything close to the destructive power, cleanliness, consistency that the Italian employs to dominate on the court and he used his incessant aggression to constantly rob time from his opponent, making it so difficult for him to impose his own varied game

A picture

Meet the Estonian amateur who started golf by accident and qualified for the Open

All we know already about Richard Teder suggests his Open Championship debut may provide essential viewing when he becomes the first golfer from Estonia to tee it up in the oldest major.He qualified by holing out from 90 yards in a sudden‑death playoff, a euphoric scene which preceded the eating of half a doner kebab for dinner.Teder picked up golf by accident, finds the sport straightforward and learned English via YouTube. There are far more illustrious names in the field at Royal Portrush this week but few competitors have such a backstory.With an air of endearing confidence, the 20-year-old says: “The job is not finished yet, right? There is still some golf to be played