Rajasthan Royals’ star allrounder happy that pacers are having their say in this edition
Dubai: Ben Stokes may have joined the Indian Premier League 2020 midway during his team Rajasthan Royals’ campaign, but he will easily go down as one of the top 10 characters who added lusture to the competition being held under such challenging circumstances in the UAE. It may have needed him a few matches to get into the groove and come blazing with that unbeaten century against Mumbai Indians, but his influence went far beyond just on-field exploits.
“Things are a bit difficult right now, but hope this has given a bit of happiness back home. Saying goodbye to my dad, my mum and my brother in Christchurch was tough. It has been a difficult time for us as a family, but we’ve pulled together and supported each other as best we can,” Stokes said in the post-match presentation - an admission which reflected the inner turmoil of one of the biggest matchwinners in world cricket now. It would be, irrespective of how the business-end of the league unfolds, a moment which would resonate with us long after this IPL is over.
The Ian Bothamesque performances which the New Zealand-born star allrounder of England had been dishing out off an on - especially in the ICC World Cup and the Ashes series last year - that there is always a great deal of expectations of him whenever he has a bat or a ball in hand. ‘‘See the pressure of expectations is something that I put upon myself, and that is to give hundred percent. I can’t always expect the results to come consistently but at the end of the game, if I have left everything on the field - I know that I have done my job,’’ Stokes explains his mechanism of dealing with the pressure.
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The IPL has, over the past three to four years, acted as a level-playing field for English cricketers - be it the illustrious trio of Stokes himself, Jos Buttler, Jofra Archer or a young professional like Sam Curran - who want to test themselves against the best and reap the rewards on this stage. The scenario was much different about seven to eight years back, when the England & Wales Cricket Board were not yet ready to open it up for their players to be part of the cash-rich league.
Asked if it was his and Buttler’s IPL sppearances which opened up the horizons for other England players, Stokes attributed the credit to Kevin Pietersen. ‘‘Before Jos and me, it goes further back to Kevin Pietersen’s playing days...it was him who paved the way for England players. It was a very sensitive subject that time because of the English contract system and he was very vocal about it.
‘‘If he hadn’t voiced his opinions, then we wouldn’t have seen so many English players here. Even if one is not playing, the training and the sheer experience of spending time with greats of the T20 game for over months makes it a worthwhile exercise,’’ he said.
Stokes is happy that contrary to the popular perception, the quality fast bowlers in the ongoing edition of IPL have been making their presence felt. ‘‘It shows that pace matters. The likes of Rabada, Archer, Nortje, Siraj (of RCB) have shown what pace can do for you by regularly hitting the 140-plus mark. Someone like Archer bowls two of his overs in powerplay for us, gets a wicket and doesn’t go for many runs,’’ he reasoned.
For the Royals fans who may have been a tad surprised that Stokes had been coming in a different role as an opener, the Durham ace revealed that he and their coach Andrew McDonald had been planning about it for while.
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