England captain Ben Stokes urged the International Cricket Council to vary the over-rate rule after his staff was docked two factors in the World Test Championship for its gradual play at Lordâs.
Stokes maintained that present over-rate laws disproportionately penalise pace-heavy bowling assaults.
âYou canât have the same rules in Asia, where spin is bowling 70% of the overs, to have the same laws in New Zealand, Australia, England, where itâs going to be 70 or 80% of seam bowled, because spinnersâ overs take less time than seamersâ,â Stokes mentioned on Tuesday (July 22, 2025).
âCommon sense would think that you should look at changing how the over-rates are timed in different continents.â
In the earlier WTC cycle, over-rate points price England 22 factors. However, the captain remained unperturbed.
âOver-rate isnât something that I worry about, but thatâs 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 itâs structured,â he mentioned.
âYouâve got fast bowlers bending their backs consistently. Throughout a game, the time of overs is going to come down because youâve just got tired bodies. We played five days, that was our 15th day of cricket. We had an injury to Bash [Shoaib Bashir], a spinner, so we couldnât turn to our spinner as much as we would have liked to on day five.
âSo, we had to throw a seam at them for pretty much the whole day. Thatâs obviously going to slow things down,â Stokes added.

