AHMEDABAD: Ben Stokes couldn’t hide his “disappointment” at frittering away a good start as he had defended well for almost two and half hours during the “hardest conditions” that he has ever batted in his 70-odd Test matches.
Stokes scored 55 off 121 balls before a skidder from Washington Sundar trapped him leg before on the opening day of the final Test against India.
“I am more disappointed that I actually get myself in and get out. Fifty is not really a (score) that will win you a Test match,” Stokes told after day’s play.
“I was very disappointed to get on that wicket, start feeling comfortable and then get out in the way I did especially because I spent two and a half hours protecting myself from the ball that skids on and getting out to the ball that skids on. So, I was very frustrated with myself,” the all-rounder said.
The “frustration”is knowing which was the danger delivery and still getting out.
“Very frustrated. After spending two and half hours, you know, playing so well, trying to avoid getting out to a straight ball and I ended up getting out to (it), that is frustrating,” said the 29-year-old Christchurch-born left-handed batsman.”
Stokes was also disappointed with the team’s overall batting performance.
“I think we are disappointed with the batting. I think we are more than capable of scoring, so yeah frustrating but it was nice to get a wicket at the end of the day,” added he said referring to Shubman Gill‘s dismissal.
Stokes had no hesitation in admitting that these are the “hardest conditions” to bat on.
“Yeah, I have played 70 odd games now and I have told others in the team that this is the hardest conditions I have ever faced as a batsman and I have played all around the world.
“It is a case of finding it your own way. It is not about coming together as a group and saying this is what we need to do next. It is about how we can go away as individuals and when we come back here next time, have we progressed as an individual and a group of batsmen, because everyone plays in a different way.”
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In Pics: Axar Patel, R Ashwin spin England out for 205 in fourth Test
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Indian spinners Axar Patel and Ravichandran Ashwin took seven wickets between them as England were dismissed for 205 on the first day of the fourth and final Test on Thursday. (BCCI Photo)
India, leading the series 2-1, were 24 for one at stumps after England fast bowler James Anderson trapped Shubman Gill lbw for nought on the third ball of the innings. Rohit Sharma (8) and Cheteshwar Pujara (15) were batting. (BCCI Photo)
Joe Root again won the toss and chose to bat at the world’s biggest cricket venue in Ahmedabad, where India won the spin-dominated third Test inside two days. (AFP Photo)
Spin was introduced in the sixth over and Patel removed openers Dom Sibley for two and Zak Crawley for nine. (BCCI Photo)
Root went for five to an in-swinging Mohammed Siraj delivery as his side slumped to 30-3 before Stokes put on key partnerships with Jonny Bairstow, who made 28, and Ollie Pope (29). (BCCI Photo)
Bairstow was trapped lbw by a rising Siraj delivery and failed in a review that showed the ball would have clipped the top of middle stump. (Reuters Photo)
Ashwin tested Pope with his off-spin after tea and the batsman was unlucky to get an inside edge off his back pad that went to short leg, and Gill took a simple catch. (Getty Images)
Stokes reached his 24th Test fifty with a boundary off a reverse sweep, but the left-hander fell to a Washington Sundar delivery from around the wicket. (ECB Photo)
Patel, who has claimed 22 wickets in three Tests and took 11 in the previous match, got Dan Lawrence stumped four short of his fifty. (BCCI Photo)
Siraj and Stokes were involved in a verbal duel, joined by India captain Virat Kohli, until the umpires intervened. Stokes then hit back with three boundaries off the quick bowler. (AP Photo)
Ravichandran Ashwin has made Stokes his bunny having dismissed the left-hander many times, and Stokes said that the India off-spinner was a fantastic bowler but refused to read too much into it.
“You come to India, you are going to face a lot of Ashwin. So he has got more chances of getting me out, but I don’t read into the fact that he has got me out that many times.
“It is what it is, someone is there to get you out and that is probably what I have got on that matter. He (Ashwin) is a fantastic bowler, obviously, but it is his job to get batsmen out,” he said to a query by PTI. There was a lot of debate surrounding the pitch that was used in the third test played here, which ended in two days, but according to Stokes the wicket for the current Test was much better than the previous game.
“Overall, it is a much better wicket than it was the last game played here, so yeah, we are just disappointed,” he noted.
India need to either draw or win the match to find a place in the World Test Championships final in June, while a win for England would revive some of the lost confidence after the thrashing inside two days in the third Test. The hosts are 2-1 up in the four-match series.