Explorer

Stokes Says Never Asked Umpires To Cancel Four Overthrows in ICC World Cup Final

"I saw all of that. I was thinking to myself, did I say that? But hand on heart, I did not go up to the umpires and say something like that to the umpires," he said in the latest episode of BBC podcast.

All-rounder Ben Stokes has cleared the air regarding the controversial 'six' which was awarded to England during the World Cup final against New Zealand. "I saw all of that. I was thinking to myself, did I say that? But hand on heart, I did not go up to the umpires and say something like that to the umpires," he said in the latest episode of BBC podcast. "I went straight to Tom Latham and said 'Mate, I am so sorry', looked over to Kane (Williamson) and said 'I'm sorry'," he added. During the final over in England's chase of 241 on July 14 at Lord's, Stokes accidentally knocked the ball coming in from deep midwicket fielder and deflected it off to the third man boundary, while attempting to dive for his crease with an outstretched bat in a bid to complete his second run. After consultation with Marais Erasmus and the rest of his umpiring colleagues, Kumar Dharmasena signalled six runs for the incident, meaning that England -- who by then seemed to be drifting out of contention needing nine runs from three balls -- were suddenly right back in the hunt for their World Cup glory needing three more from two. England were adjudged winners of the World Cup on the basis of their superior boundary count -- 22 fours and two sixes -- to New Zealand's 17 after the the match ended in a tie after regulation play and Super Over. Earlier, Stokes' teammate James Anderson had claimed that the all-rounder, who was hugely apologetic the moment the incident happened, had appealed to the umpires to overturn their decision. "I think, talking to Michael Vaughan who saw him after the game, Ben Stokes actually went to the umpires and said, 'Can you take that four runs off. We don't want it'," Anderson had told BBC's Tailenders podcast. Dharmasena, who was targeted for his controversial overthrow call, had accepted his mistake, but said he didn't regret the decision. ICC had also backed the Sri Lankan umpire over the issue. Former India skipper Anil Kumble-led Cricket Committee will also be discussing issues relating to the World Cup final, including the controversial boundary count back rule, in their next meeting in first quarter of 2020.
View More
Advertisement
Advertisement
25°C
New Delhi
Rain: 100mm
Humidity: 97%
Wind: WNW 47km/h
See Today's Weather
powered by
Accu Weather
Advertisement

Top Headline

Lok Sabha Polls: Violence Mars Voting In Manipur As Armed Miscreants 'Intimidate' Booth Agents, Voters
Violence Mars Lok Sabha Voting In Manipur As Armed Miscreants 'Intimidate' Booth Agents, Voters
'UP Rejects Film Shoot Of 2 Princes': PM Modi's Jibe At Akhilesh, Rahul At Amroha Lok Sabha Poll Rally
'UP Rejects Film Shoot Of 2 Princes': PM Modi's Jibe At Akhilesh, Rahul At Amroha Lok Sabha Poll Rally
Chhattisgarh: CRPF Personnel On Election Duty Gets Injured In IED Blast 
Chhattisgarh: CRPF Personnel On Election Duty Gets Injured In IED Blast 
Delhi Court To Hear Kejriwal's Plea Seeking Insulin In Jail Today, Says AAP
Delhi Court To Hear Kejriwal's Plea Seeking Insulin In Jail Today, Says AAP
Advertisement
for smartphones
and tablets

Videos

LS Polls Voting Phase 1: 'Please Do Not Test My Patience' Chirag Paswan's Scathing Attack | ABP NewsLS Polls Voting Phase 1: BJP candidate Anil Baluni claims victory on 5 seats of Uttarakhand | ABP NewsUP Polls Voting Phase 1: SP candidate from Kairana, Fiercely targets NDA ahead of voting | ABP NewsLok Sabha Elections 2024: Amit Shah files nomination from Gandhinagar | ABP News

Photogallery

Embed widget