Tuesday, June 9, 2026

He Said He Had Given Up Alcohol. He Won The Lord's Test By 115 Runs. Then Ben Stokes Went To A Nightclub — And Everything Changed.

 

Ben Stokes England Test captain faces ECB investigation after nightclub incident following 115-run Lord's Test win over New Zealand in June 2026

The timing could not have been worse. Or, depending on how you look at it, the timing was entirely predictable — because Ben Stokes has always lived his cricket life at the highest possible intensity, and intensity has a way of spilling over the edges when the pressure releases.

England had just beaten New Zealand by 115 runs in the first Test at Lord's. It was a dominant performance — the kind that Stokes's teams have become famous for under the Bazball era. He had led from the front, made key decisions in the field, and watched his bowlers dismantle a New Zealand batting lineup that had come to Lord's with genuine ambitions for the series. The celebrations that followed were, by all accounts, significant.

Then, sometime between 2:00 AM and 5:00 AM on Monday morning, an incident took place at a London nightclub. Ben Stokes and Gus Atkinson were present. A group of Saracens rugby players were also involved. The precise details have not been fully disclosed. What has been disclosed is enough to have changed the entire conversation around English cricket overnight.

The ECB confirmed on Monday evening that both Stokes and Atkinson are under investigation for what it described as "a breach of team protocols." The incident has been referred to the independent Cricket Regulator. ESPNcricinfo understands that it is serious enough for Stokes to be considering his position as England Test captain. Neither player sustained injuries. The Metropolitan Police have not been called. But the investigation is ongoing — and the second Test against New Zealand at The Oval begins in less than a week.

For a man who said publicly last year that he had given up alcohol and was looking forward to a "proper beer with the boys" after a big win, the circumstances of Monday morning are complicated in ways that go beyond the disciplinary process.

Monday, June 8, 2026

Two Captains. Two Centuries. One Totally One-Sided Test Match. India Have Made Afghanistan Look Very Small In New Chandigarh.

 

India vs Afghanistan Only Test 2026 at New Chandigarh showing India declaring at 571/8 with Shubman Gill scoring 169 and KL Rahul scoring 100 as Afghanistan trail by 458 runs at 113/5

There is a version of this match that was always going to happen. Two teams separated by the full width of Test cricket's development curve, meeting in a one-off game at a ground still establishing itself on the international map, in extreme heat that was always going to favour the team with the deeper batting resources and the more experienced bowling attack.

That version arrived precisely on schedule at Mullanpur's HPCA Stadium in New Chandigarh. And if anyone was surprised by what unfolded across two days, they have not been paying close enough attention to the distance between these two teams in the longest format.

India declared at 571 for 8. KL Rahul scored a century in his first Test innings as a non-captain — 100 off 164 balls, calm and controlled, the innings of a batter who has been in this situation so many times that the pressure of an international Test match feels, to him, like background noise. Shubman Gill, batting as captain for only the second time in home Tests, made 169 — his highest score as India's Test leader, a innings that began with the composure of a hundred and ended with the aggression of a batter who had decided the declaration could not come soon enough. Sai Sudharsan made 81. Rishabh Pant made 50 not out off 58 balls and looked like a man who had not been away from Test cricket for a single day.

Afghanistan, in reply, are 113 for 5. The lead is 458 runs. The match will end when India's bowlers decide it should end — and on the evidence of the first two days at New Chandigarh, that decision is not far away.

Wednesday, June 3, 2026

Shadab Khan Was 71 Not Out. Pakistan Needed 42 More Off 6 Overs. Then Nathan Ellis Took Two Wickets In One Over And The Whole Thing Fell Apart.

 

Pakistan vs Australia 2nd ODI 2026 at Gaddafi Stadium Lahore showing Australia winning by 41 runs with Nathan Ellis taking 4 wickets and Shadab Khan scoring 71 in a losing cause

At the start of the 45th over, Pakistan needed 42 runs from 36 balls with four wickets remaining. Shadab Khan was on 68. The chase that had looked dead at 78 for 6 — three quick wickets, the crowd silent, the match apparently over — had somehow come alive again. 42 off 36 is not easy. But with Shadab in this kind of form, it was not impossible.

Then Nathan Ellis bowled the 45th over.

Two deliveries. Two wickets. Mohammad Nawaz caught at long-off going for the six that would have brought the equation into single-digit territory. Abrar Ahmed bowled through the gate first ball — a full, straight delivery that Abrar played around, the stumps disturbed, the match effectively decided. Two balls. Two wickets. And Shadab Khan — who had batted for 104 balls and made 71 runs in a cause that looked lost from the moment Pakistan's top order collapsed — was left stranded at the non-striker's end, watching the innings he had constructed so carefully unravel in the space of two deliveries.

Australia won by 41 runs. AUS 231/9. PAK 190 all out in 44 overs. The series is level at 1-1. And on Thursday at Gaddafi Stadium — the same ground where this match was played — everything is decided.

Monday, June 1, 2026

He Sealed It With A Six. Virat Kohli. 75 Not Out. Back-To-Back IPL Titles. RCB Are Champions Of The World Again.

 

Virat Kohli scores 75 not out off 42 balls as RCB beat GT by 5 wickets in IPL 2026 final at Narendra Modi Stadium Ahmedabad to win back-to-back IPL titles

When the moment came, it came the way Virat Kohli moments always do — with a six.

The ball from Washington Sundar was full, inviting, slightly too straight. Kohli was on 70. RCB needed four more runs to win. He stepped across his stumps, picked up the line early, and launched it over the mid-wicket boundary with a swing that had no doubts in it anywhere. The ball cleared the rope by ten metres. The Narendra Modi Stadium — all 132,000 people of it, the largest cricket ground in the world, packed with Gujarat Titans supporters who had come hoping to witness a title on their home ground — fell silent for just a moment before the RCB fans scattered across the stands erupted.

Back-to-back IPL titles. Only the third team in the tournament's nineteen-year history to defend their crown, after Chennai Super Kings in 2010 and 2011, and Mumbai Indians in 2019 and 2020. And at the centre of it — as he has been at the centre of everything good that has happened to Royal Challengers Bengaluru this season — Virat Kohli. 75 not out. 42 balls. Nine fours and three sixes. His fastest ever IPL half century, brought up in 25 balls. Player of the Match. Player of the Final. The man who refused to let it slip.

RCB won by five wickets with 12 balls to spare. Gujarat Titans had posted 155 for 8 — a total that felt below par on the Ahmedabad surface, despite the quality of RCB's bowling — and Kohli chased it down almost single-handedly, keeping his composure through four quick wickets in the middle of the chase to ensure the title never genuinely felt in danger. The second star is on the badge. The dynasty, if one word can describe two consecutive titles, has begun.

Saturday, May 30, 2026

He Was 22 Off 14. Then He Hit 71 Off 19. Rajat Patidar's Innings Against GT Was The Most Extraordinary Thing IPL 2026 Has Produced.

Rajat Patidar scores 93 not out off 33 balls with strike rate 281 as RCB beat GT by 92 runs in IPL 2026 Qualifier 1 at Dharamsala


There is a moment in every great innings when the match stops being a contest and becomes something else entirely. When the bowlers are still trying, still running in, still going through their plans — but everyone watching knows it is over. The batter has simply decided.

That moment came at HPCA Stadium in Dharamsala on Monday night when Rajat Patidar was 22 off 14 balls. Scratchy. Cautious. Not himself. Kagiso Rabada had already beaten his outside edge twice. Jason Holder had bowled him a delivery that he had mistimed straight to cover — and then watched it land six inches short of the fielder's hands, dropping safely to the turf for a single.

Then something shifted.

He launched Rashid Khan — the best spinner in the IPL, a bowler who had been among the tournament's top wicket-takers all season — over extra cover on the full. Not over mid-wicket. Not over long-on. Over extra cover, off a good-length ball, one-handed at the point of contact. It was the shot of a batter who had decided the match was over. And from that moment, it was.

In the next 19 balls, Rajat Patidar scored 71 runs. He finished on 93 not out off 33 deliveries. Strike rate 281.81 — the highest ever for a captain in a fifty-plus innings in IPL history. Nine sixes. Six fours. One dot ball. And at the end of it, Virat Kohli — standing at the non-striker's end, watching his captain dismantle the best bowling attack in the competition — was visibly slack-jawed.

RCB posted 254 for 5. The highest total in IPL playoff history. GT were bowled out for 162 in reply. RCB won by 92 runs. And on Sunday, May 31, at the Narendra Modi Stadium in Ahmedabad, they will play Gujarat Titans in the IPL 2026 final — their second consecutive final, defending the title they won last year.

The ECB Held An Emergency Board Meeting. They Were Scared He Would Announce His Retirement On Instagram. Ben Stokes Has 48 Hours To Decide His Future.

  By Tuesday morning, the situation had deteriorated to the point where the ECB held an emergency executive board meeting. Not a scheduled...