Ben Stokes is being groomed as a possible long-term captain of Chennai Super Kings as he prepares to start the Indian Premier League this year as a specialist batter.
Stokes heads into the tournament with English fingers crossed that he is fit to play a full role in the Ashes this summer after a longstanding knee injury curtailed the all-rounder’s role with the ball during the recent 1-1 Test series in New Zealand.
Fresh scans are said to have come back clear but England’s Test captain has recently had a cortisone injection and will not bowl at the start of the eight-week tournament that begins on Friday. CSK, who signed Stokes for £1.6m, begin on Friday against Gujarat Titans.
England are banking on strong lines of communication between the medical team and their equivalents at CSK to ensure Stokes is ready for the summer. Brendon McCullum, the Test head coach, has said he will be in regular dialogue with Stephen Fleming, his fellow New Zealander and former captain, who is in charge of the franchise’s first team.
Having paid a hefty sum for his services in the most recent auction, CSK are clearly invested in the fitness of Stokes and not just in the short term. Separate sources have said Stokes was not just bought as a player but as a possible candidate for the captaincy down the line.
CSK will once again be led by MS Dhoni this season but with the 41-year-old in the autumn of his career – and Ravindra Jadeja’s attempt at the role last season a short‑lived and unhappy experiment – a successor will be required.
As such, the new campaign is being viewed as a case of integrating the 32-year-old Stokes into the dressing room and the franchise at large, while he attempts to get back to all-rounder status before the challenge against Australia begins at Edgbaston on 16 June.
“I want a fit Ben Stokes playing his best cricket at the Ashes,” Mike Hussey, the CSK batting coach, said recently. “I want both teams at their best, going hard at it and I think it will be an unbelievable series to watch.”
As well as Stokes, England’s medical staff will be monitoring the fitness of Jofra Archer and Mark Wood from a distance, with the two fast bowlers playing for Mumbai Indians and Lucknow Super Giants respectively.
The challenge is how the pair achieve the requisite workloads for red-ball cricket when bowling four overs in a Twenty20 tournament. England’s first Test of the summer against Ireland starts on 1 June – three days after the IPL concludes.