Ben Stokes pictured for the first time since infamous night out in Chelsea that saw him dropped as captain… as it emerges England chiefs are considering a total booze ban

Rob Key is considering an alcohol ban for England’s cricketers ‘at any time and at any stage’ – and admitted he has not ruled out sacking Ben Stokes after he and Gus Atkinson broke the team curfew following the first Test victory over New Zealand at Lord’s.As the fallout from their late-night trip to The Rex Rooms in Chelsea continued, Key denied the Test team had become a ‘national embarrassment’, and revealed that Atkinson told him he was unaware a curfew had been in place for several months.On the day Stokes was seen for the first time since Sunday night, emerging from his home in County Durham in a baseball cap, a hoodie and tracksuit bottoms, Key expressed his despair and anger at the players’ failure to respect the new rubric. On the day Stokes was seen for the first time since Sunday night, emerging from his home in County Durham in a baseball cap, a hoodie and tracksuit bottoms, Key expressed his despair and anger at the players’ failure to respect the new rubric. Ben Stokes pictured by his home in County Durham on Thursday afternoon‘A lot of people have had phone calls that you’re just in disbelief with,’ said England’s managing director. ‘Then you get angry. There’s a load of things and I’m still not sure I’m over those at the moment.‘Over the last few months Ben and I have spent so much time together talking and working out the way forward, and I thought some of those things were starting to come to fruition on the pitch. To then very quickly be talking about this is not where I want to be.‘I’m trying to give myself a bit of time. Do we need to look at, actually, have we been strict enough? Even when they win a game of cricket, is it now a time when there’s just no alcohol at any time and at any stage?‘I need to think through these things, because I don’t want to make a rash decision that actually hinders the team and creates a situation where they don’t feel they can do anything. But the players now have to show the public that they can be trusted. At this point it’s hard to say they can.’He added: ‘No, I don’t think they’ve become a national embarrassment.’During a media briefing at The Oval, venue for next week’s increasingly crucial second Test against New Zealand, Key several times declined the chance to back Stokes’s captaincy.  Flintoff and Harmison Jr set to star for Under 19s A second generation of Flintoffs and Harmisons are set to play together for England following the announcement of the Under-19 squad to face South Africa.Rocky Flintoff, 18, has already made it as far as the England Lions team that his father Andrew Flintoff coaches, but has now been joined by Steve Harmison’s son teenage fast-bowling son Charlie in a group of 12 Young Lions for an upcoming one-day series against the Proteas.It is a throwback to the early years of this century when the Flintoff and Harmison seniors were part of the England team that went on to win the 2005 Ashes.One other notable inclusion in Michael Yardy’s squad is a third 18-year-old, Glamorgan’s Tom Norton, who became the youngest ever bowler to take a County Championship hat-trick and first debutant to do so in 120 years last month.Surrey all-rounder Ralphie Albert, grandson of snooker legend Jimmy White, is also in the squad.RICHARD GIBSON <!- – ad: https://mads.dailymail.co.uk/v8/us/sport/cricket/article/other/mpu_factbox.html?id=mpu_factbox_1 – ->
 Asked whether he was saying he wouldn’t sack him, he replied: ‘I’m not saying that. At this point in time, it has not crossed my mind to get that far ahead. It’s just about finding out all the information, finding out how he is, putting all that information together and working out what the best thing to do is.‘We have to let that process play out, because I want to work out what the best thing to do for this team is, and the best thing to do for Ben Stokes.’Key suggested there was no excuse for Atkinson not knowing about the curfew after it was introduced in January, and added: ‘If those protocols weren’t in place, it could have been a lot worse.’