Trevor Bayliss confident England will welcome Ben Stokes back 'with open arms'

Stokes has been made available for selection again despite facing affray charge following late night incident in Bristol last September.

CHRISTCHURCH, NEW ZEALAND - NOVEMBER 29:  English cricketer Ben Stokes arrives at Christchurch Airport on November 29, 2017 in Christchurch, New Zealand. Stokes flew in from the UK in preparation for the upcoming Ashes series in Australia.  (Photo by Kai Schwoerer/Getty Images)
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Head coach Trevor Bayliss has no doubt Ben Stokes will be welcomed back "with open arms" by the England squad when he returns next month.

Stokes has been absent from the international set-up since a late night incident in Bristol last September but, following his charge for affray, the England and Wales Cricket have decided he is once again available for selection.

He will link up with the side for the New Zealand leg of the forthcoming Twenty20 Tri-Series, skipping the early matches in Australia, to end a five-month hiatus.

England lost the Ashes 4-0 while Stokes watched from afar and are currently seeking revenge in the one-day series, but Bayliss does not expect any awkwardness or resentment when the 26-year-old checks back in.

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"I'm happy he's been made available, the players and coaches are looking forward to seeing him," Bayliss told the BBC

"He's a very popular member of the team and the squad. I'm sure they'll welcome him back with open arms.

"We're fully aware of why he wasn't available, that's fair enough ... it's just the way it was. We knew he wasn't going to be available. We set about competing in that Ashes series knowing we didn't have him. That's resigned to history now and we're looking forward.

"It was certainly something we'd much rather not have had to deal with but all credit to the players, once the games came around they were fully focused on playing.

"I've got admiration for those guys that they were able to see past that and get on the with the cricket."

Bayliss explained the decision not to draft Stokes for the start of the T20 series in Australia, denying it was down to the greater media circus he might face Down Under.

Instead, he indicated it was purely a sporting decision regarding his match sharpness.

He also suggested a preparatory stint in domestic cricket was in the offing before he links up with England again.

"Hopefully we can get him some cricket somewhere as part of his practice going into the New Zealand leg. That'll be up to him," he said.

"It's all about performance. We want him to be up and running and ready to go. I think there's a few legal things to get through in the next week or so, 10 days, but then it's about being prepared to play. We can't get him to come in and perform in an international match straight away, so it's about getting him ready.

"He's raring to go. He's a cricketer first and foremost and he just wants to be out on the field playing."

The 55-year-old also declared himself content with the decision making at board level.

There has been criticism of a process that saw Stokes banned from duty while under investigation but cleared to play after being charged, but Bayliss said: "It's a board decision. They've kept me up to date pretty much with what's been going on. I'm happy with the decision that's been made and fully understand why it's been made, so do the players and Ben himself.

"It's a fairly complex situation, one that hasn't been easy to work through, but we're coming out the other end of it and hopefully we can get on with the cricket."

Meanwhile,  Stokes has been named in the International Cricket Council's Test and one-day international teams of 2017.one of four players to feature in both teams, alongside India captain Virat Kohli, Australia opener David Warner and South Africa's wicketkeeper-batsman Quinton de Kock.