‘Play on, pontiff’

‘Play on, pontiff’

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Media caption, Pope makes ‘terrific’ century as England chase down India

Chief Cricket Reporter at Headingley

Saturday at Headingley. Fancy dress. A group of clergymen took their place on the Western Terrace.

Maybe there was a universe where Ollie Pope joined them in watching from the sidelines. Maybe his place was never under any serious threat from Jacob Bethell.

If it had taken a leap of faith from Ben Stokes to retain his vice-captain at number three for the first Test against India, then Pope picked the perfect time to play the grateful disciple.

A day after Stokes put England under the pump by giving away the chance to bat first, Pope’s century offered the captain a way out of purgatory, the number three 100 not out in England’s 209-3, 262 behind India’s 471.

“It sums up and proves why he’s England number three,” said opener Ben Duckett, who made 62 in a stand of 122 with Pope.

There is an argument to suggest any debate between Pope and Bethell is ludicrous. On Saturday, Pope pushed his average as England’s first-drop to 45.19, while Bethell has never made a century in professional cricket.

But numbers alone never tell the full story. Pope’s stats mask a feast-or-famine career – before this game 34% of his Test runs had come in only six of his previous 98 knocks. Pope can be a nervous, skittish presence at the crease. The calm Bethell looks born to be an international batter.

Stokes put the conversation to bed on Thursday, pointing to the 171 Pope made against Zimbabwe in Nottingham in May. Stokes said it would have been “remarkable” to leave him out after such an innings, without ever elaborating on what might have happened had Pope failed at Trent Bridge.

“There’s noise outside of a dressing room but there’s no noise in it,” said Duckett.

“We’re not having discussions about who’s goin
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