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    HomeCricketEngland vs India"What Goes Around Comes" Geoffrey Boycott Takes Dig at Ben Stokes Over...

    “What Goes Around Comes” Geoffrey Boycott Takes Dig at Ben Stokes Over ‘Handshake’ Row

    Times of Sports — Preferred Source CTA

    Geoffrey Boycott has backed Indian batter Ravindra Jadeja and Washington Sundar for choosing to continue batting on the final day and also slammed Ben Stokes for his behaviour during the Manchester Test of the Anderson-Tendulkar Trophy.

    The drama unfolded on Sunday when the Indian duo, batting on 89 and 80 respectively, declined England skipper Ben Stokes’s offer to settle for a draw before the start of the final hour.

    With the game drawn towards a tie, Stokes approached the umpires to initiate the handshake protocol, but Jadeja and Washington Sundar opted to carry on.

    Addressing the incident, Geoffrey Boycott said, “What goes around comes around. England were gobby enough when it suited them, so you can’t blame India for wanting to stay on and allow two batsmen who had worked their socks off to reach their hundreds.”

    “If you give it, like England do, then you have to be able to take it. I could hear them through the stump mics chipping away at India, so why should they be nice to them and agree to go off when England have had enough?” he added.

    Jadeja and Washington Sundar batted for more than two sessions to rescue India from the brink of a heavy defeat, stitching together an unbeaten 203 run stand for the fifth wicket to force a draw.

    “These India players are tough cookies. They do not take a backward step. There is no way I would have let anyone drag me off on 89 after I had worked hard all day to save the game for my team,” Boycott wrote.

    “Ravindra Jadeja and Washington Sundar deserved their hundreds. They left the ball well, played with the full face of the bat and defended their wickets at all costs. Well done.”

    Jadeja and Ben Stokes
    Jadeja and Ben Stokes (image: X)

    Boycott went on criticise current players for excessive sledging. “I’m not sure what it is with modern players. You hear a lot of them mouthing off. It never really happened when I was playing. It will carry on at the Oval and India will go there thinking they got a win at Old Trafford,” he wrote.

    He also took dig at England’s bowling unit, which failed to bowl India out on a fifth day pitch after racking up 69 runs in the first innings.

    “You learn more from failure than you do from success. And we failed to bowl India out. The draw highlighted the deficiencies in our bowling. If you think about it, when your best bowler in both innings is the England captain, who is a batsman-bowler, something is not right,” he wrote.

    Despite lauding Ben Stokes efforts with the ball, Boycott cautioned against over-burdening the all-rounder.

    “It was a tremendous effort from Ben Stokes but apart from Jofra Archer at times, the rest were ineffective,” he wrote.

    “Every time Stokes bowls he makes something happen. It’s a gift. You are born with it, you can’t teach it. It is wonderful. But if they are going to rely on him all the time, then as a bowling unit England are in trouble.

    “He is 34 and needs to take care of himself. As much as he would like to bowl long spells, the coach has to tell him to manage himself more. It is better him bowling a bit less and staying fit than bowling more and getting injured.”

    With England secured 2-1 lead in the series, the fifth match of the series will be played between July 31 and August 04 at The Oval.

    Johi
    Johi
    I'm Johi, a dedicated cricket news writer! With a passion for the game and a keen eye for detail, I would always love to bring you the latest updates, insights, and analysis from the world of cricket & Football with a positive entertainment.

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