Showing posts with label retirement. Show all posts
Showing posts with label retirement. Show all posts

Flintoff signs off on a highs

Andrew Flintoff’s Test career has come to an end rather prematurely. The versatile England all-rounder was having serious fitness over the past few years and he probably made the right decision to quit the longer version of the game.

He was a potentially great cricketer but somehow could not do justice to his talents. He couldn’t produce the kind of consistency which the champion all-rounders like Tony Greig and Ian Botham had done for the country before him.

Yet Flintoff was a colossus for the team and his presence in the field was certainly a source of encouragement and inspiration for his teammates. He was one of those tough characters who awed the opponents.

Andrew Strauss and his team could not have wished a better sendoff for the big all-rounder than the massive win over Australia in the fifth and final Test at The Oval that allowed England to regain the Ashes.

Ideally Flintoff would have loved contributing more substantially in his farewell Test but he would obviously be delighted with the end result. It was a comprehensive victory over the Aussies and more importantly it enabled England to lay their hands on the Ashes that has not stayed for long with them during the last couple of decades.

Flintoff, however, had a hand in bringing about the victory on the penultimate day of the decisive game. With Ricky Ponting and Michael Hussey on song, the Australians were cruising in the afternoon session and there were hints of the contest getting tighter than was being anticipated at the start of the innings.

It was Flintoff’s brilliant direct hit that found Ponting short of his crease and ended the threatening partnership. The run out of the Australian skipper opened the floodgates and England cashed in to seal the fate of the game.

It was a magnificent piece of fielding that not only brought to an end the dangerous partnership but also boosted the morale of the side whose shoulders were beginning to drop during the onslaught.

Flintoff was a tough guy on the field but he knew the importance of human qualities. "I would rather be regarded as a decent bloke rather than any sort of cricketer I might have been. That is far more important to me. Whatever you do on the cricket field is one thing, but being able to face yourself in the mirror every day and say 'You're not a bad egg', that is far more important. Cricket is one thing, but I want some friends afterwards,” he observed rather modestly.

"I don't think I ever achieved greatness and I don't profess to. I was asked, 'have you been a great cricketer', and the obvious answer is no. That's the Bothams, the Sobers, the Imran Khans, the Tendulkars, the Ricky Pontings, who achieved greatness over a long period of time by playing Test after Test after Test,” he added.

"I have had an Ashes victory twice, I have had a Test career where I have played 79 Test matches, and hopefully I will go on playing one-day internationals, so from a professional point of view I am happy. For the bulk of my career I have played through pain and with injury, so to be out on the field was an achievement in some ways. But is that greatness? No," Flintoff conceded.
10:29 PM

Mark Butcher announces his retirement from cricket


Mark Butcher, right, in action for Surrey. Photograph: Max Nash/PA

• Batsman played 71 Tests for England
• Surrey captain plagued with knee problems

Former England batsman Mark Butcher has retired from cricket with immediate effect due to ongoing knee problems.

Butcher played 71 Tests between 1997 and 2004, scoring 4288 runs at an average of 34.58. He is is perhaps best remembered for his match-winning 173 not out against Australia at Headingley in 2001.

The 36-year-old also captained Surrey and made 38 centuries in his 17-year career.
11:52 AM

Muralitharan set Nov-2010 to retire from Test cricket


World leading bowler Muttiah Muralitharan has said he will retire from Test cricket at the end of Sri Lanka's home series against West Indies in November 2010. The Sri Lankan off-spinner, who is record holder in both Tests and One-Day International cricket, plans to continue in the shorter forms of the game.

“I'm thinking next year's Test series against West Indies in September will be my last," Muralitharan said after Sri Lanka's 36-run win against Pakistan in the opening ODI in Dambulla in which was named man of the match for scoring 33 with the bat and picked up 2-46. "But I still want to play on if I can to the 2011 World Cup."

Muralitharan, 37, has struggled in recent years with a knee injury that ruled him out recently concluded Test series against Pakistan. "I put in a lot of effort in the past month to get fit," Muralitharan said. "The doctors told me I have to go through the pain and train harder because an operation will mean me being out for six to seven months.”

"They think I'll be able to play for one to two years and told me to have the operation when I finish playing. That means my career is almost over and I am not going to play for long.”

Muralitharan made his Test debut in 1992 and became the highest wicket-taker in Tests when he broke Australian Shane Warne's record haul of 708 in 2007. He has picked up 770 test wickets in 127 matches at 22 runs per wicket and could become the first player to claim 800. “The hardest game in cricket is Tests. The hardest part is you have to take wickets and get batsmen out and sometimes you have to spend two days on the field. You have to mentally prepare yourself for every game.”

He however decided to play ODIs and Twenty20 Internationals, and he will be aiming to play in his fifth World Cup, held in Bangladesh, India and Sri Lanka in 2011. “In Twenty20, you look to contain the batsmen and he tries some shots and gets out. Fifty-over cricket is also the same. In Test cricket you have to read the batsmen, set the fields properly and get the wickets."

Muralitharan is the third player in recent weeks who has opted to conclude his Test career to compete in the shorter format, after fellow Sri Lankan teammate Chaminda Vaas and England's Andrew Flintoff.
12:13 PM
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