BSS
  13 Sep 2022, 12:29

England potential excites skipper Stokes after South Africa series win

 LONDON, Sept 13, 2022 (BSS/AFP) - Ben Stokes said on Monday it was "scary"

to think of what England might achieve after rounding off a succesful first-
season as captain with a dominant display against South Africa.

England needed just 25 minutes at the Oval to complete a nine-wicket win over
the Proteas in barely more than two days' actual playing time that secured a
2-1 series victory.

It also meant England had won six out of seven Tests under a new leadership
duo of Stokes and coach Brendon McCullum -- a far cry from a record of one
win in 17 matches that marked the end of Joe Root's reign as skipper.

New Zealand, the World Test champions were beaten 3-0 before England defeated
India in a one-off Test, held over from last year because of coronavirus
concerns in the Indian camp, prior to seeing off the Proteas.

All of those triumphs were marked by a willingness to engage in dashing run-
chases, while removing as much pressure from players as possible, albeit much
of England's success, as South Africa captain Dean Elgar noted, was built on
traditional fundamentals of the red-ball game.

But they all took place on home soil and Stokes is determined England should
"walk towards danger", in cricket terms, during their next Test series, a
three-match tour of Pakistan in December.

England have been without two injured fast bowlers in Jofra Archer and Mark
Wood all season, but Stokes is excited by the prospect of both express quicks
being available when his team try to regain the Ashes at home to arch-rivals
Australia next year.

"Who knows how far we can take this side over the next couple of years?," he
said.

"We've got two of our premium fast bowlers who have had big injuries this
summer and have missed a lot of cricket.

"You add Jofra and Woody into the mix being fully fit -- it's scary to think
where things could go, especially with the ball."

- 'Excited' by Pakistan challenge -

But before then England face the very different challenge posed by going to
Pakistan, where they have not played a series since 2005 due to security
concerns.

"It is something that we are going to have to try to continue to do in
Pakistan, we can't live off the fact that we've won six out of seven games
because we will be presented with a completely different challenge," he said.

"(We must) Walk towards that danger of what Pakistan is going to throw at us.

"It's a hot country, you are not going to get anywhere near as much
assistance with the ball as you do in England. You will be facing a lot more
spin.

"That's a new challenge for us and something we are excited by. To show in
different situations we can show off the positive mindset and always try to
put the pressure back onto the opposition," he added.

Former New Zealand captain McCullum played down his part in England's
transformation.

"It is definitely more Ben than me, he is the leader of the side," McCullum
told the BBC.

"He is a genuine, authentic person, who loves being able to give guys freedom
to be the best versions of themselves on the cricket field.

"That is why we've seen guys who probably came into this summer with some
question marks over their head be able to go out there and perform and look
just as good as any international cricketer going around."