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Home  » Cricket » Stokes's leadership puts England's young guns at ease

Stokes's leadership puts England's young guns at ease

Source: PTI
February 08, 2024 15:34 IST
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A teenage British Asian and a practising Muslim, Rehan Ahmed said that the England management is accomodating in giving time off for Friday prayers, even at the expense of training.

IMAGE: A teenage British Asian and a practising Muslim, Rehan Ahmed said that the England management, including captain Ben Stokes, is accomodating in giving time off for Friday prayers, even at the expense of training. Photograph: Francis Mascarenhas/Reuters

Exceeding expectations, England's inexperienced spinners have outperformed their seasoned Indian counterparts in the first two Tests, and young Rehan Ahmed attributed it to team environment and Ben Stokes's leadership.

The five-match series is level at 1-1 at the moment but, amazingly enough, spin is one area in which the tourists have emerged winners.

 

It is quite remarkable that the trio of Ahmed, Tom Hartley and Shoaib Bashir have taken more wickets (33) than the formidable group made up of titans such as Ravichandran Ashwin, Ravindra Jadeja, Axar Patel and Kuldeep Yadav (23).

"That just shows how great the team environment is," Ahmed, 19, was quoted as saying in BBC.

"Tommy and Bash, you've seen them come in and not be nervous and that's credit to the team. The environment and the leadership we have, it does make you kind of forget the players you are playing against -- we just focus on what we need to do."

Even in terms of economy rate, the England spin attack is ahead of the Indians.

With Stokes and Brendon McCullum at the helm, Ahmed cuts a relaxed figure.

"They (Stokes and head coach Brendon McCullum) just don't care about how bad things can go. It's always about what good you can get out of it.

"So if I bowl four bad balls and get a wicket, that's better than bowling 16 good balls in a row," Ahmed said.

He became the youngest player to play Test cricket for England when he made his debut at 18 years and 126 days old in Karachi in December 2022, signalling his arrival with a match-turning five-wicket haul in Pakistan's second innings.

Ahmed also recounted how Stokes's astute man-management skills extends beyond cricket.

A teenage British Asian and a practising Muslim, Ahmed doesn't face any issue getting time off for Friday prayers, even at the expense of training.

"I remember a time in Abu Dhabi where there was a team day out on a Friday," said Ahmed.

"We had Friday prayers. Obviously me and Bash (Bashir) were there. I messaged Wayno (Wayne Bentley), the team manager, asking if we could miss this day because we needed to pray.

"Stokes messaged me straightaway and said 'come to me whenever you want about this kind of stuff, I understand it fully'. And yes he's stuck by his word.

"Every time I pray he is so respectful, very understanding. Everyone is on this tour."

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