Captain Ben Stokes Feels 'Knackered' Yet Remains 'Fit to Bowl'
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The team skipper Ben Stokes is said to be "exhausted" but still "fit and ready" to bowl, according to assistant coach Jeetan Patel, despite he did not bowl on the day three of a pivotal Ashes Test.
Stokes utilized five other bowlers as the Australian side progressed to 271-4 in their second innings, building a commanding lead of 356 runs at the Adelaide Oval.
The dynamic player had previously battled for more than five hours at the wicket across two days to compile 83 runs in England's first innings.
A Grueling Innings
During his extended 198-ball stay, the 34-year-old was struck on the head by Mitchell Starc and experienced muscle cramps. He also required time off the field on the previous day after banging his head on the ground while trying to field the ball.
"He might be a bit tired and just need a bit of time to himself right now," stated Patel.
"From what I understand, he's quite ready to bowl. I think he's just pretty knackered and he's expended a great deal out of himself to get through this point in the game."
Past Fitness Concerns
Considering his chequered injury past – Stokes has not been fully available in any of England's last four series – any indication the star all-rounder might be nursing an issue attracts considerable scrutiny.
Always keen to be in the thick of the action, Stokes' absence from the attack on Friday was puzzling given it was England's final opportunity to stay in the Ashes series.
At 2-0 down and needing to win in Adelaide to keep their aspirations of winning back the Ashes alive, England had conceded a first-innings lead of 85 runs.
"All I know is he operates at 100%," said Patel. "If he thinks he can't do it at 100%, I don't think he's going to do it. That's probably where he's at."
The tourists could have remained in the contest by dismissing Australia for around 240 in their second innings and had slim hopes at 53-2 and 149-4, only for the home team to pull away through Travis Head's not out 142.
Even though England delivered 66 overs, Stokes chose not to bowl.
"He abstained from bowling but that's perhaps a different discussion with him," noted former New Zealand international Patel.
"I don't actually know. We all know he never performs at 80%. Maybe he thought he was a risk, so he didn't bowl."
Past Instances and Current Strain
The most recent occasion Stokes curtailed his own bowling was on the last day of the tied fourth Test against India at Old Trafford in July.
He subsequently missed the fifth Test at The Oval with a shoulder problem.
Stokes has a history of driving himself past breaking point, and it was put to Patel that the captain felt he might have risked injury if he pushed himself any further in Adelaide.
Facing Imminent Loss
England stand on the edge of yet another defeat in Australia, once again probably facing defeat inside the first three Tests of the series.
If the visitors' defeat is completed on Saturday's fourth day, it would mean the destination of the Ashes has been determined in 10 days – the first and second Tests were over in short periods respectively.
Not since 1921, when Australia needed only eight days of play to win in England, has the winner of an Ashes series been determined so swiftly.
A Daunting Task Ahead
If a first goal is to extend this match into a fifth day, England will also have to pull off the highest successful chase at the Adelaide Oval to keep the series alive.
"I still believe there's an chance for us," said Patel. "It will be difficult, we're going to need something magical. I think it's high time we witnessed something special from us."
"Three games in, we've thrown some but absorbed many. It's about time, now we're with our backs to the wall, to fight back fiercely."