LEEDS, England: England's exhilarating run chase to battle back into the Ashes series was even too much for captain Ben Stokes, despite the captain being the source of many a dramatic innings.Supporters headed to Headingley on day four with England needing 224 runs in the must-win test to stop Australia retaining the Ashes with two matches to spare, with Stokes very much in mind as their go-to hero.On the ground where Stokes' incredible 135 not out steered England to victory over their old foes in the 2019 series, the skipper managed just 13 and had to watch on from the pavilion.Not that he could bring himself to, as Chris Woakes hit the winning runs to seal a pulsating three-wicket win to leave the series finely-poised at 2-1 to Australia."I'm not going to lie, I was a bit nervous at the end," Stokes said. "We knew we needed to win this one to keep alive our hopes of winning the Ashes."I walked about two kilometres around the Headingley dressing room in the last half-hour, I didn't actually watch the last 20 runs being scored.
It's a completely different place when you cant do anything, you can't influence the game any more."You're left watching and hoping things are going to go your way.
Because of where the series was at before this game started the whole performance with bat, ball, field - it was just an unbelievable effort from everybody."The key innings came from young Harry Brook, whose 75 made all the difference on his home ground.
Brook carried the England resistance, reaching his half-century off 57 balls - his ninth score of 50 or more for England in just 10 tests.Scoring at a rapid rate has been Brook's calling card since he came into the England side.