‘I’m not signing the form, no’: Ben Stokes asks ICC to take a hard look at how over rate fines are structured

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England captain Ben Stokes reacts as India's Nitish Kumar Reddy hits a four during day five of the Third Test at Lord's, London, Monday July 14, 2025. (Bradley Collyer/PA via AP)England captain Ben Stokes said that he will not be signing on any over rate related papers after his team was docked two World test Championship points for slow over rate in the Lord’s Test against India a couple of weeks ago. The home skipper added that the ICC needed to take a hard look at the existing over rate rules considering different conditions all around the world.“I’m not signing the form, no. Over rate isn’t something that I worry about, but that’s not saying that I purposely slow things down. I do understand the frustration around it, but I honestly think there needs to be a real hard look at how it’s structured,” Stokes said in the pre-match press conference on Tuesday.“You can’t have the same rules in Asia where spin is bowling 70 percent of the overs to have the same laws in New Zealand, Australia, England, where it’s going to be 70, 80 percent of seam bowled, because the spinner’s over takes less time than the seamer’s over. Common sense would think that you should look at changing how the over-rates are timed in different continents,” Stokes reasoned.He also feels, at times, there is a need to slow the game down and that also impacts the over rate.“I think also the over rates obviously have gone down over the course of quite a few years now. I wonder if scoring rates have got anything to do with that as well. The ball’s getting hit to the boundary more often. It’s obviously going to take a lot longer.“I can understand it from an external point of view around the overs. I really do. But it’s a very tough thing to do when I feel there’s more to it than just getting round, getting told, ‘Oh, just quicken up. Get through your overs.’ “There’s a lot that actually goes on out on the field. You’ve got fast bowlers bending their back consistently. Throughout the course of a game, the time of overs is going to come down. You’ve just got tired bodies. We played for five days. That was our 15th day of cricket.”The England captain also said that the injury to slower bowler Shoaib Bashir also complicated the over rate scenarios.Story continues below this ad“We, obviously, had an injury to Bash (Shoaib Bashir), a spinner, so we couldn’t turn to our spinner as much as we would’ve liked to on day five, so we had to throw seam at them for pretty much the whole day. That’s obviously going to slow things down. There are periods in the game where you do try and just slow everything down, more tactically if anything, like that,” the 34-year-old said.“I think there’s just so much that influences how your over rates can be affected, that it can’t just be as simple as this is the time, this is what you need to do, because you want to keep the quality of cricket as high as you possibly can. And there are times in games where there isn’t a game on the line where you will just throw the ball to spinner to get your overs round, but then that’s just… you’re playing in an international game where you’re just trying to get your over rate back. I don’t think people want to come and watch that,” he added.Stay updated with the latest sports news across Cricket, Football, Chess, and more. Catch all the action with real-time live cricket score updates and in-depth coverage of ongoing matches.© IE Online Media Services Pvt Ltd