Ben Stokes' homecoming gives England chance to 'show the world how good they are'

New Zealand series presents the latest challenge of Stokes’ tenure as captain

Vithushan Ehantharajah14-Feb-2023On Thursday at the Bay Oval, Ben Stokes will captain England in New Zealand. Which is quite a big deal – because it isn’t.The boy from Christchurch turned twenty-something renegade is now the 31-year-old figurehead of the prim and proper world of English cricket. Even if he’s no fan of suits, he’s wearing the blazer damn well.There will be family and childhood friends to watch him, both here in Mount Maunganui and next week in Wellington. It’s not so much of a homecoming as a scheduled return given how often he comes back to the country, and how often these two teams seem to come up against each other. It can’t be long before Stuart Broad, on his fifth tour of New Zealand, qualifies for dual citizenship.One of Brendon McCullum’s go-to phrases since taking the big job at the start of last summer is “be where your feet are”. Yet with Stokes it seems the case that he is wherever his feet have been. All the places he’s experienced, all the things he has done, inform the decisions he makes in the here and now. And unlike most others, he leans more on the good times than the mistakes.That, ultimately, forms the bedrock of his captaincy. A record of nine wins out of 10 Tests to date has been built upon learnings from success, and the associated graft put in to achieve it. Beyond the 89 caps in the longest format are leading-man roles in two limited-overs World Cups and a documentary. He is one of the most sought-after personalities in the world when it comes to lucrative franchise opportunities and simply time. Now he wants all that for others.Stokes’ full-time tenure started with a whitewash of New Zealand•Getty Images”I’m at a stage now where I would much prefer to leave a mark on other people’s careers than look to make mine more established,” he said, sat among the English press pack. “I’ve played a lot of cricket and done some great things with some great teams over the years. I think that, being captain now, I’ve got a real desire to make the best out of the team that I’ve got here and players who will come in in the future if that does happen.”So that’s one of my goals as England captain: to hopefully let some of these guys in the dressing room here just have an amazing career and if I can influence that in any way shape or form then I’ll be happy.”You can already see that in play, with old and new. Broad and James Anderson, having considered retirement in 2022, now seem to be having the most fun in decades. Ben Duckett, who returned to the fold for Pakistan after six years out, believes “there’s no better time to be playing Test cricket for England”. All that is down to Stokes stripping away the pressures of the format without diminishing any of the privilege. He has pulled off a rare trick, not for the first time in his career.His influences are few and not contained to cricket, or indeed real life. He cited Paul Collingwood, his skipper when he broke into the first team at Durham, as someone who was “very open to allowing the players that he had to go out and express themselves… He understood that he did have a group of players at the time who needed that and they wanted to go out and take the game on.”