Ben Stokes retirement: Decoding what England captain meant by 'reasons can wait' in his shock announcement
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Ben Stokes retirement: Decoding what England captain meant by 'reasons can wait' in his shock announcement originally appeared on Cricket News. Add Cricket News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.
KEY TAKEAWAYS:
- England captain Ben Stokes announced his retirement from international cricket on June 28, 2026.
- While announcing the news to his England teammates, Stokes said, "reasons can wait" for the decision.
- The big call came mid-way through the decisive third Test between England and New Zealand at Trent Bridge.
- The nightclub controversy and suspension appear to have accelerated his eventual decision but might not be the sole reason.
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Ben Stokes' emotional message to England teammates before retirement
Before the fourth day's play at Trent Bridge on June 28, 2026, Ben Stokes gathered England's players for one final dressing-room speech as captain.
The England skipper revealed that the ongoing Test against New Zealand would be his final match in international cricket but urged his teammates to put any emotion aside until the job was finished.
"There's something that I know is going to happen over the next two days, which is that this is my last two days as your captain and my last two days representing England," he said, in a video released by ECB on X.
One of England's all-time greatest captains, Ben Stokes, has decided to retire from international cricket at the end of this Test match.
— England Cricket (@englandcricket) June 28, 2026
Ben, you have been the most inspirational captain, leader and legend this team could have ever hoped for.
We love you so much and wish you… pic.twitter.com/U5grq0F0kj
"Reasons can wait why, but I've had many trips to the well before for this team and I've got one more trip to do."
The words "reasons can wait [on] why" are what stand out. What were those reasons? Stokes may not have deliberately chosen that phrasing, but it is worth examining in the context of everything that has unfolded over the past few weeks.
The reasons behind Ben Stokes' retirement, in his own words
His interview after stumps on Day 4 with Sky Sports to Ian Ward and his former teammate Stuart Broad may provide us with answers to those reasons.
While he never pointed to one single incident, Stokes described a decision that developed through months of mental and physical exhaustion, admitting the past few weeks had merely confirmed what he already feared.
“It’s been an interesting four-five weeks, and six months generally," Stokes said. "Emotions when this day comes to everyone there’s relief, happiness, excitement, sadness everything you go through. All of those words I use there."
Captaining England, he explained, remained the greatest honour of his career but behind the victories and memorable moments was a side that only those closest to him truly understood.
"My family, and particularly my wife, they see what you go through emotionally," Stokes said. "As good as it is, it can drain you and affect you in negative ways."
He revealed the feeling had been growing ever since the Ashes in Australia. After throwing everything into preparing for this summer, the 35-year-old believes he may simply have burnt himself out. Even before the nightclub incident, the Lord's Test had left him questioning where he stood mentally.
"I put so much time and effort into it, I maybe possibly burnt out," he said, before admitting, "everyone says about the day [they resign the captaincy] what’s it like, they say it hits you in the face. And I thought a few weeks ago it did. I was putting pads on yesterday, getting ready to go out there, and that was the final nail in the coffin."
The nightclub controversy that followed Lord's only added to those emotions rather than creating them. While Stokes described the incident as "unfortunate", he also revealed that returning to play for his boyhood county Durham gave him "a new lease of life", something he struggled to rediscover after rejoining England.
"I am very excited about the next part, what I get to do going back to play for my boyhood club Durham really. I am comparing this week to last right now and buzzing because of it," he revealed. "There have been moments this week that have been really tough that just adds to everything and makes it in the back of your mind that you’re making the right decision."
"So many things have led me to know that this is the right decision," Stokes added. "There's the emotional side, the physical side and the mental side."
The Cricket News Opinion: Stokes may be keeping some of the reasons on hold
Whether the nightclub controversy ultimately caused Ben Stokes' retirement may never be known, at least not this week, this month or perhaps even this year. But it's difficult to ignore the timing.
Within days, Stokes found himself suspended for the second Test, his leadership questioned publicly and reports emerged suggesting he had even considered stepping away from England captaincy altogether.
Former captain Michael Vaughan later claimed the episode may have damaged the trust between Stokes and the ECB, while reports also suggested his relationship with managing director Rob Key and head coach Brendon McCullum had come under unprecedented strain.
MORE:What really happened in Ben Stokes' nightclub incident: Timeline of England captain's controversy
McCullum publicly dismissed suggestions of any rift, insisting their friendship remained intact, while Stokes himself urged people to "give Baz a break" and stressed they had spoken almost every day throughout the ordeal.
In any case, England's challenge now goes far beyond replacing one of the greatest all-rounders of his generation. It must replace a leader who willingly carried the weight of English cricket on his shoulders, sparking a revolution of sorts that gave supporters the belief that no match was truly ever lost until Stokes had a willow in his hand.
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