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This is my toughest time as England captain – Stokes

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Ben Stokes, the captain of England, described himself as “toughest time” because of reports of excessive drinking in the tourists’ abominable Ashes series.

After three Tests against Australia, England are already 3-0, with the possibility of regaining the urn and the possibility of a humiliating clean sweep in the final two.

Rob Key, England’s director, confirmed on Tuesday that he would look into players’ behavior while they were vacationing in the coastal town of Noosa during the second and third Tests.

Later that day, a video of opener Ben Duckett drunk appeared on social media.

The England and Wales Cricket Board stated that the video would “establish the facts,” but the BBC did not confirm it.

As England prepares to play the fourth Ashes Test at Melbourne Cricket Ground (MCG) on Boxing Day, according to Stokes, who told BBC Sport, “This is probably the most difficult time of my life as an England captain.”

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Stokes, who became captain in 2022, cited his own personal experiences with “quite tough times.”

Due to an incident outside a Bristol nightclub, the 34-year-old missed the 2017-18 Ashes tour. Stokes was indicted for a charge of affraying him later.

In order to prioritize his mental well-being, Stokes also took a five-month break from playing cricket in the summer of 2021.

Later, the all-rounder revealed he had panic attacks and feared he wouldn’t play again. In a documentary that was released in August 2022, his struggles were revealed.

Over the course of my career, I’ve had some pretty good times. He added that I’ve also gone through some difficult times.

“I’m obviously aware of reports and the news that is circulates.” As England captain, the players and everyone in the dressing room are my top concerns.

“I am aware of how it can feel when everything just piles on top of you.” It’s challenging. As England captain, my top priority is making sure everyone is safe.

Stokes claims he spoke to the opener to offer his full support, and Duckett has continued to play for England in his place for the fourth Test.

According to Stokes, Duckett was an “incredibly influential person” within the group.

Stokes, Key, and head coach Brendon McCullum’s future will face significant scrutiny, both for the Ashes results and for the England players’ behavior in Australia.

Stokes claimed that he “absolutely” wanted to stay as skipper following his disappointing third Test defeat in Adelaide, which ended England’s fourth successive Ashes defeat in Australia.

When things are going well, Stokes said, “Everything is easy.” There are times when I believe the responsibility for this actually falls on you more than it ever has.

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England’s Ashes tour was scheduled a year before the Ashes, and it succeeded despite the tourists’ 2-0 defeat in two Tests.

On the Queensland coast, the England squad spent four nights. Some players were drinking a significant amount of their time in Noosa, as well as two previous days in Brisbane, where the second Test was taking place, according to reports from various media outlets, including the BBC.

It’s much easier to do things when you’re winning, Stokes said. When you’re losing, as we’ve done when we’ve been 3-0 down, you get criticized, criticized, and rightly so.

When you’re 3-0 up in a big series like this, “you don’t really have a leg to stand on.”

England have won 18 of their last 18 matches against Australia. To avoid becoming the fourth England team to lose 5-0 in this nation, the visitors must avoid losing one of the final two games.

Use of this kind of material either causes you to let it accumulate too much or allows you to use it as fuel, Stokes said.

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‘Why I was always driving home for Christmas’

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I’d be on a motorway somewhere during Christmas as a manager, which is usually what that meant.

We always kept our family home on the south coast during my 30-year tenure in management. If I wanted to get back to see my kids open any of their presents, then travelling back after training on Christmas Eve – or even Christmas Day itself – was not unusual for me.

One thing I never forgot about was Christmas dinner with my family, whether it was from Middlesbrough to Plymouth or Bristol to Stoke, no matter where I sat.

Sometimes I would leave on Christmas Day after training to arrive home on time, drive back, and then check into the hotel where the team was staying or wherever I was staying.

Even if I gave my players Christmas Day off, I would still travel back on Christmas night.

The game on Boxing Day was never far from my mind despite the amount of time I spent traveling, going up and down the highway, and even when I was tucking into my turkey dinner.

It remained the same whether I faced Manchester United, who we clinched victory over in my first Premier League game against Stoke in 2008, or a lengthy trip to Bradford or Barnsley as I climbed up the league ladder.

A Stoke City fan is appropriately dressed for Christmas as he enjoys his side's win over Liverpool on Boxing Day 2012Getty Images

My worst, huh? Any defeat, even if it was near home.

But at least there was a chance to get past it quickly, usually with a second game a few days later.

Although football management is at full throttle most of the year, Christmas and Easter were always special times to watch the games.

You can still be hired and fired at that time of year – both have happened to me over the festive period – but as a player and a manager, I loved it. In light of the Premier League Christmas schedule this year, I am so disappointed.

Although it’s a tradition to go to games as a family day out on Boxing Day, they’ve always attracted a lot of people, regardless of the season, and it’s only the Premier League game that’s on Friday. The rest are spread over the weekend.

Has it really reached the point where the decision-makers for Premier League games don’t seem to care about what the real supporters want, the ones who show up week in, week out, don’t really need the extra revenue these larger crowds bring, but?

Nights out were a must for me as a player.

Tony Pulis (left) as a young player with Bristol Rovers in 1977 and (right) as a senior professional with Bournemouth a decade laterRex Features

A lot has changed about the game since my first Christmas as a footballer, 50 years ago.

In the 1970s, Bristol Rovers was a place where I could give, if I had the chance!

Throughout the entire season, each apprentice was expected to care for the boots of at least three senior professionals, a task that was not taken lightly.

Cleaning dressing rooms and even treading in divots to repair a worn-out pitch was also in my remit, but the match boots were crucial and would have to be in spit spot condition for every game.

You would be nonstop over the two busiest times of the year, Christmas and Easter. They would require hours of cleaning, drying, and polishing them.

There was some reward, though. We hoped that Christmas would be one of our two extra pay days. The other happened at the end of the season when the players you were looking after would show their appreciation with a few pounds tip.

I had left home at 16 to join Rovers who, at that time, were in what is now the Championship. After training on Christmas Eve, I was permitted to return to South Wales at that age.

The apprentices from Bristol would have to make arrangements for us if the senior players arrived on Christmas Day. But even at that age it was made pretty clear our jobs entailed working during these holiday periods, and on Boxing Day we were always watching the first team or playing in the Football Combination league.

Although I always took care of my own boots and studs anyway, turning professional myself removed all of the above, but Christmas was still a special occasion.

Every club I attended had a member who would organize Christmas parties and evenings.

I went to all sorts of different venues, with many different themed evenings.

Footballers were much closer to the communities they played in because the times were different and our wages were very close to the majority of workers who were unpaid. Alcohol-free nights out at neighborhood bars and nightclubs were never an issue because mixing with the public wasn’t a problem.

In fact, many managers at times would encourage nights out together to build team bonding and spirit, and encourage a closeness within the group.

Although it is well known now that drinking excessive amounts of alcohol is bad, the English game and culture accepted and accepted it in the 1970s and 1980s.

Liverpool, Nottingham Forest, and Aston Villa are just a few examples of the European Cup finals that our teams won and competed in during that time.

Having to ‘ influence ‘ nights out as a manager

Tony Pulis watches Middlesbrough beat Bolton on Boxing Day 2017 alongside the club's owner and chairman Steve Gibson.Getty Images

I followed the same path as I did when I first transitioned from playing to managing.

We have all grown more aware of how smoking and alcohol can affect our physical conditioning over time. In previous columns I have explained how, with the majority of players I signed, I really checked out their characters.

I would always allow the players to plan their night out after a home game that was played in December, never too close to the festive schedule.

I tasked one or two senior players with taking care of the younger players and making sure the entire group behaved themselves.

In my early years of management, with the lads being in the lower leagues, they were generally safe enjoying themselves locally like I did as a player.

They had Sunday to recover from what would undoubtedly be a difficult workout because my mandate was that Monday would be a difficult one.

I’ve always found it fascinating that some players can party hard and emerge victorious the next day while others muster great strides to overcome.

When I moved up the levels, I became more and more aware of how I had to try to influence their Christmas nights out, including where they took place.

I have to admit that some of the stories I’ve heard should be left in my head rather than tucked into this column. Mondays always bring the unavoidable banter of what had transpired on the night out.

However, times have changed. Players have become like film stars and a lot of clubs now allow their players the freedom to jet off to a different country for their party.

Players have become more cut off from everyday life as their salaries have skyrocketed. When people go out, things also get a different turn with the advent of camera phones and social media.

I would always get the players to organise a dinner and a night out with their wives and girlfriends locally, and there would be club-run evenings to celebrate Christmas, but my main concern was always the lads ‘ night out.

The players should plan their own players’ parties outside the town or city they represented, in my opinion.

Pulis is 'the ghost of Christmas past' on this fan's festive turkey hat in 2017, when two of his old teams, Stoke and West Brom, met on 23 December. The Potters beat the Baggies 3-1PA Media

overcoming obstacles and forming bonds

To go from meeting in local pubs to watching private jets take players to far away cities is a huge change for a manager, but the same principle of team bonding remains.

The most crucial thing is that the young men enjoy each other’s company, have a great time together, and hopefully help them overcome their current addiction to mobile phones, even if only temporarily.

Being a cohesive, ethical team requires sacrificing yourself occasionally for your fellow teammates. Team spirit and togetherness is a vital ingredient for success in any team sport and I have witnessed people’s perceptions of others change after spending a few hours relaxed together, and seen characters change because of this too.

Yes, there have been some incredibly unsatisfying incidents at various clubs over the years, but I still believe that properly arranged Christmas parties are a good idea because they break down barriers and unite team members in a close-knit community.

One incident, at Stoke in 2009, is always brought up, but one of the golden rules I have always followed as a manager was to “what happens in the dressing room stays in the dressing room.”

Suffice to say the players ‘ Christmas party that year went ahead as arranged.

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Shattered joy: Wedding celebrations cut short in Gaza after Israeli attack

Given the circumstances in the Gaza Strip, it is understandable that the wedding reception for Mustafa and Nesma al-Borsh was a modest affair.

Nesma photographed with her groom, Mustafa, at a beauty salon and rented a white dress. Only 40 people showed up for the ceremony and party in the Tuffah neighborhood in eastern Gaza City.

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Given the harsh conditions we are living in, we tried to steal a few happy moments, and we did, Nesma said, “but I won’t say it was the wedding day I had always dreamed of.”

Mustafa and Nesma were the ones who stole those happy moments.

Israeli shelling struck a building right next to the tent as the celebration on Friday came to a close.

The Ministry of Education in Gaza operated a vocational training facility, but during the war, it had been converted into a shelter. After the wedding, the couple planned to reside there.

Dust, smoke, and screams abound at the scene, and flames erupted from the area.

As their wedding day turned into a tragedy, the newlyweds were astonished and unable to comprehend what was happening to them.

A photo from Mustafa and Nesma’s wedding photo shoot [Abdelhakim Abu Riash/Al Jazeera] just before their home was bombed.

From groom to rescuer

“I grabbed my bride’s hand and sent her with my just-departed female relatives.” After that, I removed my wedding suit jacket and rushed to safety with the other men inside the building, according to Mustafa, 29, from Halawa, a displacement camp in Gaza City near Tuffah.

The second floor of the school, where Mustafa’s family and others were staying, was directly hit by the shelling. Additionally, it struck the couple’s planned classroom. Everything they had planned for their wedding was destroyed.

My nephew, who was critically injured all over his body, was taken out by me, Mustafa said.

Although there were calls for ambulances, Israeli assistance was required for the entry of emergency personnel.

The ambulances were not permitted to enter from the Israeli side, he continued, adding that we had to wait more than two hours before they arrived. The circumstance was “incredibly terrifying.” Around us, there were strikes and shelling.

After more than two hours, ambulances were finally permitted to eject the dead and injured.

The victims were retrieved after civil defense teams ordered everyone to leave the building and instructed them to relocate to a safer location.

All their belongings were relocated to shelters inside the city, where families were relocated, once more.

The groom pointed to his white shirt and trousers as evidence that “I’m still wearing my wedding suit” as of that day.

Mohammad, my eight-year-old nephew, passed away two days later from his injuries, according to Mustafa.

The groom Mustafa Al-Borsh and his bride Nesma
After their shelter was bombed and they lost everything, Mustafa al-Borsh and his bride Nesma are now living together in separate tents with their respective families [Abdelhakim Abu Riash/Al Jazeera].

repeated backtracking

Before Israel’s genocidal war in Gaza started in October 2023, Mustafa tied the knot with the now 22-year-old Nesma.

That month was the couple’s wedding date.

The kitchen, sofa set, and bedroom were all ready for me. In a photo of the apartment that had once been a part of his family’s home in Jabalia, northern Gaza, Mustafa said, “My fiancée and I put great effort into choosing every piece. Later, it was destroyed.

The couple’s wedding proposal sounded impossible because they had been bombarded, starved, and repeatedly relocated from their families.

Our families occasionally put pressure on us to get married because the war was dragging on, but we both agreed to disagree,” Nesma said, with Mustafa nodding in agreement. In the midst of war and displacement, “we kept asking ourselves how we could celebrate or organize a wedding.”

After losing two of his older brothers during the war, one in December 2023 when their home in Jabalia was bombed, and another in March 2025 during the second half of the conflict, Mustafa’s grief added distance to the idea of marriage.

As his mother listened in the conversation, Mustafa said, “Losing my brothers cast an overwhelming shadow of grief over us, especially my mother, who cannot stop crying whenever she remembers them.”

The couple believed the war had ended when the couple’s engagement was resumed on January 19, 2025. But it quickly resumed.

“At that time, my uncle’s house in Jabalia was still standing, so we made the decision to rent an apartment there and begin building it.” My bride started getting ready and putting on her outfits.

However, “we were shocked when the war broke out again in the middle of March 2025,” Mustafa said.

Both were forced to flee from northern Gaza to the west of Gaza City after the war’s end, where they had to spend their days in tents there until a second ceasefire was in place on October 10, 2025.

Mustafa and Nesma sit on the rubble of the building that was shelled
[Abdelhakim Abu Riash/Al Jazeera] This is Mustafa and Nesma’s third marriage preparation, but they both lost everything.

Refuge

About 50 kilometres (0, 30 miles) from the so-called “yellow line,” which Israel still controls in Gaza, Mustafa and his family moved to a shelter in the Tuffah neighborhood after the ceasefire was announced in October.

Despite our concerns about the school’s proximity to the yellow line, he said, “We wanted to escape life in the tents during the winter. We decided to move in.”

Both families agreed to hold the wedding on December 19 with a small ceremony in a tent close to the shelter following family discussions.

“I prepared everything I could once the date was decided. I was helped by other displaced families who also provided a classroom for us at the shelter. According to Mustafa, everything appeared to be going well.

Because the shelter was a large number of displaced families, the neighborhood was densely populated, and the area was located outside the yellow line, Mustafa claimed he never anticipated it would be attacked.

In accordance with the ceasefire agreement, the educational center was situated in a region where Israeli forces had withdrawn.

Despite the truce, hundreds of Israeli violations have been reported, with more than 400 Palestinians killed in recent attacks.

He claimed that there were eight fatalities in the shelling of the building next to the wedding tent, all of whom were Mustafa’s family’s neighbors and relatives.

Youssef, 7, with a bandage around his head, holds a mobile phone showing an image of him before his injury
Youssef, 7, Mustafa’s nephew, was seriously injured in the airstrike on the shelter shortly after leaving the nearby wedding tent [Abdelhakim Abu Riash/Al Jazeera].

once more displaced

A mother, her husband, their child, and my young nephew, who had just begun to dance with joy, were among those killed, according to Mustafa.

What justification exists for pursuing these individuals? And what crime did I commit in order to steal our wedding day from my bride and I?

Due to the couple’s recent displacement and lack of a place to live together, they are now living separately from their families once more.

“Every time, I have to start from scratch.” Is this the extent of suffering? Adds despair to Mustafa.

“My bride and I are displaced, our families are displaced, and we live in tents with relatives.”

Nesma said, “We insisted on holding our wedding while the war was in full swing,” and then suddenly it returned on the day of our wedding.

Archer ruled out of Ashes as Bethell replaces Pope

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In yet another devastating blow to England following a miserable tour of Australia, pace bowler Jofra Archer will not play in the Ashes series.

After missing for four years in July, the 30-year-old has suffered a side strain.

He won’t play the fifth Test in Sydney in the new year and the fourth Test in Melbourne on Boxing Day.

In a series that is desperate and England are now tied with third-place after three matches, Archer has been their standout performer.

The Sussex man has nine wickets and has also recorded his first half-century in Adelaide’s third Test.

Archer, who has spent years battling elbow and back injuries before making a return to Test cricket, is devastated by this.

Five months after making his comeback against India at Lord’s, he has played five Test matches before suffering a second injury.

After the fourth test is evaluated, Archer’s availability for the T20 World Cup in India and Sri Lanka, which kicks off in February, will be decided.

Captain Ben Stokes praised his team’s effort, saying, “This has been exceptional.”

He put in a great effort for the team despite the many questions raised by his potential or whatever it may be coming out of Australia.

Archer’s first five-wicket haul in Test cricket in six years came in at 5-53 in Australia’s opening ODI match against Australia.

However, he was only allowed to play 12 overs in the second innings of Australia, and a scan on Tuesday in Melbourne revealed the side injury.

Zak Crawley, Ben Duckett, Jacob Bethell, Joe Root, Harry Brook, Ben Stokes (capt), Jamie Smith, Will Jacks, Gus Atkinson, Brydon Carse, and Josh Tongue make up the England XI for the fourth Ashes Test.

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The most recent development in long-running rumors centers on England’s number three spot replacing Pope with Bethell.

Pope’s run of eight Tests against Australia has ended with a half-century, with a 46-run top score in six innings on this Ashes tour.

Since scoring a century against India at Headingley in July, the 27-year-old has averaged 24.38 in his previous seven Test matches.

Overall, he averages 34.55 in 64 Tests. For the first time since West Indies’ tour in 2022, he has not participated in a Test.

Since Bethell made his Test debut in New Zealand at the end of last year, the Surrey man has been under pressure. He scored three half-centuries in as many games.

Bethell has had a difficult year since that groundbreaking tour of New Zealand, though.

In the last year, he has only played three top-class matches, including the sixth and fifth Test against India at The Oval, where he scored six and five.

The 22-year-old made 71 appearances for England Lions in Brisbane earlier this month when they faced Australia A.

When Pope was replaced as vice-captain by Harry Brook when the England squad was announced in September, rumors that Bethell might start the Ashes series grew.

Pope has instead been chosen as the first victim of the unsuccessful bid to regain the urn.

According to Stokes, “He’s not going to be the only one who’s disappointed in the dressing room with how things have turned out.” It’s difficult to go on a trip like this when you’re 3-0 down.

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Shoaib Bashir is once more unavailable, but opener Ben Duckett is still available despite being the subject of a Tuesday social media video.

Video of Duckett apparently drunk in Noosa was shared online shortly after England director of cricket Rob Key announced that he would look into reports of excessive drinking during the players’ holiday.

The England and Wales Cricket Board stated that it would “establishing the facts,” but the BBC did not confirm the video.

Ben Stokes, England captain, said, “It’s all pretty fresh and brand-new. I’ve obviously reached out to him, spoken with him, and pledged my full support to him throughout this.

He is a highly influent figure within this group. In a situation like this, where everything seems to be dominating you, and also for some players more than others, I will always be supporting my players.

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