Barry and O'Connell said Stokes bought them drinks when they met him and fellow England team-mate Alex Hales in a club that evening. "We were so grateful to Ben for stepping in to help. He was a real hero," 20-year-old O'Connell told the newspaper. "Kai feared he could be attacked. If Ben hadn't intervened it could have been a lot worse for us."Ben Stokes ‘defending gay men from homophobic abuse’ before arrest – reports https://t.co/JCxx6VzP4y via @guardian_sport
— The Guardian (@guardian) October 28, 2017
Barry added things could have got ugly if the England star hadn't intervened. "I'm not a fighter and we didn't want a fight," said Barry, 26. "We could've been in real trouble. Ben was a real gentleman." Barry said they hadn't realised the fall out for Stokes until they received a visit from a police officer this week.Gay couple call Ben Stokes a real hero after he 'defended them from thugs'https://t.co/7NGBBqhsnM pic.twitter.com/XyLO0YRqXP
— Daily Mirror (@DailyMirror) October 27, 2017
O'Connell said he hoped Stokes would get to play in Australia. "Ben is a really nice guy and I hope he can still play for England in the Ashes," said O'Connell. "It would be awful (if) his career was ruined over this. He was just trying to help defend Kai."'Ben Stokes saved us from homophobic attack, he was a real hero'https://t.co/c6aVtqYpbu
— Telegraph Cricket (@telecricket) October 28, 2017


