Daily Mirror

STONE READY TO ROLL

Fast bowler Olly’s building up for a crack at Aussies

- BY DAVID CHARLESWOR­TH

OLLY STONE is confident he can force his way back into England contention this summer – as long as his body holds up.

Having seemingly conquered his back troubles with the insertion of two metal screws to reinforce his spine, a recurring hamstring problem sidelined fast bowler Stone for much of last year and wrecked his Ashes hopes.

Still only 30, Stone’s express pace makes him an attractive option for an England side soon to be in transition as James Anderson follows Stuart Broad into retirement.

As England look to build an attack capable of winning the 2025/26 Ashes in Australia, Stone, who has taken 10 wickets in three Tests at an impressive average of 19.4, is hopeful of gaining internatio­nal recognitio­n again. But staying fit for Nottingham­shire this season is his immediate priority.

“I never sit and think ‘there’s bad times around the corner’. You have to keep being positive, especially with the nature of the job,” Stone said.

“I’ll always go out there and try and bowl as quickly as I can and put some performanc­es together. It’s down to me to go and do that and hopefully the phone call will come and I’ll be back out there representi­ng England again.

“I’d still love to play in an Ashes but Down Under, that’s still a big one on the list and there’s one coming up.

“If I’m in the mix come selection then great. If not, as long as I’m fit and healthy and playing then that’s just where I want to be.

“I’ve spent far too much time sitting on the sidelines. It’s just all about playing games now and enjoying the rest of my career.”

Stone is carefully building up match fitness in the County Championsh­ip and had a helping hand in Notts’ win over Lancashire – taking three wickets before a career-best 90 with the bat.

The stop-start nature of his career means Stone has played fewer than 50 first-class matches but while he has dipped his toes into the T20 franchise circuit, quitting red-ball cricket has never been considered.

“I just love playing cricket, it’s an unbelievab­le job,” he said. “That’s the thing that keeps me going and gets me back out there.

“If I’d have fallen out of love with the game, I think I might have walked away by now. I’m still hungry to perform and when you’re out there, the good times outweigh the bad.

“It’s been tricky at times, I’ll be honest, but the reason I love it so much is why I’m still out there.

“I love T20 but it’s just has a different feeling about it. But the hard graft is something I love and why I can’t give it up and why I’ll keep going until my body tells me otherwise.”

 ?? ?? NEED FOR SPEED Fiery Stone can add real firepower to England’s bowling attack
NEED FOR SPEED Fiery Stone can add real firepower to England’s bowling attack

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