Flintoff to retire from Test cricket at end of Ashes 2009

His bowling stats are not that great (test batting average of 31.69 is ok for an all-rounder but bowling average of 32.51 is below-par) and his name will never be mentioned in the same breath as Sobers, Imran, Botham, Kapil and Hadlee

Among his contemporaries, Shaun Pollock was a much better bowler and Kallis a much better batter than him.

After the short-lived euphoria of 2005 he led England to 5-0 Ashes series whitewash in 2006/7

http://www.cricinfo.com/england/content/current/story/414514.html

Andrew Flintoff has announced that he will retire from Test cricket at the end of this Ashes summer, although he still intends to make himself available for Twenty20 and ODI cricket, and is expected to be fit for tomorrow’s second Test against Australia.

Flintoff, who has missed 25 of England’s last 48 Tests through a variety of injuries, suffered another fitness scare on the eve of the Lord’s Test, when he reported soreness and swelling in the same right knee that required surgery back in April, after he tore his meniscus while playing in the IPL.

“It’s not something I have just thought of overnight, it’s something that’s been on my mind for a while regarding this series,” said Flintoff. "With the knee flaring up again and getting the injections on Monday, now is a time I felt comfortable with doing it. There’s been a lot of speculation over my future for the past few weeks, so I wanted to get it out there, and concentrate on playing cricket.
“I’ve had four ankle operations and knee surgery, so my body is telling me things, and I’m actually starting to listen. I can’t just play games here and there while waiting to be fit. For my own sanity, and for my family’s, I’ve got to draw a line under it. I’ve been going through two years of rehab in the past four, which is not ideal.”

Prior to England’s practice session on Wednesday morning, Flintoff gave the team talk in a sombre atmosphere, and afterwards Paul Collingwood immediately came up and shook him by the hand. “Freddie simply said that these four Tests would be his last in Test cricket,” a team insider told Cricinfo. Andrew Strauss, the England captain, said the team were saddened, though not surprised, about Flintoff’s decision to stand down from Test cricket.
“As players we’ve had a feeling this would come sooner rather than later,” Strauss said. “We feel sad he’s had to make this decision at his age, but we’re sure it will motivate him even more for this series.”
The knee injury that has threatened his participation at Lord’s followed a spirited performance in the first Test at Cardiff, in which Flintoff bowled 35 overs but was once again under-rewarded with figures of 1 for 128. Strauss was optimistic on Wednesday that Flintoff will come through a fitness test and make himself available for selection, and he was seen skipping during England’s warm-up in the indoor nets, before padding up for batting practice, then sending down a few pacey overs on the outdoor nets.
“The indications are that he’s going to be fine,” Strauss said. "He had a good bowl today, we just need to see how he reacts to what he did today before we can be 100% sure. At this stage we are hopeful but we can’t be sure.
“When you go in with three seamers, you’ve got to expect all three to bowl a lot of overs. Fred understands that, but this week in all likelihood there will be four seamers and maybe [they] won’t have quite as big a workload. We’d never play any bowler in a Test match who we didn’t think could contribute as fully as anyone else.”
Though he acknowledged that Flintoff’s overall statistics do not bear greatness, Strauss lauded Flintoff’s effect on the modern game.
“He’s had a dramatic impact in English cricket over the past few years, in the style with which he’s batted, and for a long period he’s been one of the bowlers in world cricket that batters least like facing, although the figures maybe don’t show that,” Strauss said. “And also as a personality, he’s done a huge amount for cricket in the way he’s played with a smile on his face. Test cricket will miss him, there’s no doubt about that. I’m sure he’ll go out in a style that befits his quality, with a bang, with big performances, and with some stories to tell at the end.”

Regardless of his immense stature in the England dressing-room, the statistics of Flintoff’s recent form and impact on the Test side are not flattering. Since the 2005 Ashes, he has averaged 28.25 with the bat and 34.68 with the ball in 23 Tests (both figures down on his overall Test record of 31.69 and 32.51), and he has not managed a century or five wickets in an innings in any series since then.

Moreover, he has been unable to impose himself on matches in the same way that he did in his 2005 pomp. Although some leeway has to be made for the quality of the opponents he has faced - Flintoff has often been recuperating during low-key series in preparation for the marquee events - the statistics paint a sorry tale. In the 25 matches that Flintoff has missed since 2005, England have won 12, drawn 10 and lost on only three occasions. In the 23 matches in which he has been present, those numbers are almost exactly reversed - won 3, drawn 7, lost 13.

“Being part of an Ashes-winning team was very special, and so was beating everyone in the world for a period of time, and playing a major part in that,” said Flintoff. “I’d have liked my career to kick on after that, but being a professional rehabber for two years makes it pretty difficult to do that. It would have been nice if it had carried on a bit longer, but I’ve no regrets. I’m happy.”

Flintoff received a cortisone injection on Monday, and is sure to play through the pain if he has to. “For the next four Test matches I’ll do everything I need to do to get on a cricket field and I’m desperate to make my mark,” he said. “I want to finish playing for England on a high and if you look at the fixtures going forward, the way my body is suggests I won’t be able to get through that.”

Re: Flintoff to retire from Test cricket at end of Ashes 2009

The best England had to offer in the last decade and an immensely popular Yorkshire cricketer. Comparing him to Botham is as unfair as comparing Razzak with Imran. Flintoff had some remarkable highs, not least of which was the 2005 ashes.

I will always remember him as the guy who along with Fletcher, refused to play Monty instead of Giles in the first two games in the 2007 ashes and someone who failed to back Pieterson otherwise Pieterson would still be captian.

A more important point is that he is only 31, and will continue playing ODIs and T20. This might be a trend that other player will follow, unlike Warne who only played tests in his last years. Zaheer Abbas wanted to play ODIs only and retire from tests in 1985 and people said it could not be done.

Re: Flintoff to retire from Test cricket at end of Ashes 2009

Its about the bloody time he does, too much media surrounding him and very little action for last 1/2 a decade.

Slight correction:

Flintoff is a Lancastrian (from Lancashire)

Agreed he had some highs but his highs lasted only two years - too injury prone, too inconsistent

Among Flintoff's positives he played in a fiercely competitive manner, but always within the spirit of the game - the enduring image of him consoling Brett Lee after that painful loss (by 2 runs in the second test at Edgbaston, Birmingham) in 2005 Ashes series stands out as an example

Re: Flintoff to retire from Test cricket at end of Ashes 2009

Thank you for that correction GoldenAsif. Im not sure who I was thinking of, my mistake :)

One thing I remember about the 2005 Ashes was that Flintoff chose Elton Johns “Rocket man” to be played from the stands when he came out to bat.

In the MLB, the same song was played when Roger Clemens used to pitch for the Yankees. Rogers nickname is rocket too but I have no idea if that is related to the song or if Clemens & Flintoff ever met.

probably Gough

Darren Gough is a yorkshireman like Boyks

Re: Flintoff to retire from Test cricket at end of Ashes 2009

yeap, Gough. Thank you. Boyks is a great fan of Flintoff too, he used rave on & on about how good he is for English cricket back when Flintoff first started playing.

Re: Flintoff to retire from Test cricket at end of Ashes 2009

Flintoff a great allrounder or it was just a hype.
Sometimes stats don't tell you the whole story. Maybe being an allrounder his batting average 31 is OK but his bowling average of 32 and less three wicket per match strike rate do not sound like he was a great bowler.
On the other hand Imran Khan has 37 batting and 22 bowling average Botham has 33 and 28.

Somebody said somewhere. "Stats are like miniskirts. They hide more than what they reveal"

If you look at the peak 40 odd tests of all the modern great all-rounders, Flintoff's figures are impressive (if Xolile's stats are correct)

(cricinfo)
"Posted by Xolile on (July 16 2009, 07:01 AM GMT)
A LEGEND, Even statistically Imran Khan was a late bloomer. Botham burned out. Flintoff bloomed late and burned out. But in his mature, uninjured prime (i.e. after the summer of 2002 and before the Ashes of 2006/7) Flintoff played 41 tests, averaging 40.1 with the bat and 27.9 with the ball. How does this compare to the other modern greats? Here goes, in no particular order, the peak 41-match rolling averages for the seven great modern test cricket all rounders: Botham (bat 38.0; ball 24.8; diff 13.2); Kapil Dev (bat 33.8; ball 28.4; diff 5.4); Hadlee (bat 33.0; ball 18.4; diff 14.6); Imran Khan (bat 51.8; ball 17.6; diff 34.2); Pollock (bat 39.0; ball 19.4; diff 19.6); Kallis (bat 73.1; ball 32.9; diff 40.2). What do these numbers tell us? That even statistically Flintoff can hold his head high in the most illustrious company. And this despite very poor career management."

During the last 10 years of his career from 1982-92 (48 tests as captain), Imran Khan averaged 50+ with the bat and 19 with the ball. That is some consistency

Re: Flintoff to retire from Test cricket at end of Ashes 2009

I think now cricketers do not like test cricket and recently many cricketers have limited themselves to only ODIs and T20s.. I'm sure a time will come when no one would watch test cricket if they do not do anything to make test cricket exciting.

don't agree with you there. The first Ashes test was absorbing despite it being a draw and the first two Pak v SLA tests produced results. Pakistan could have won both games (and should have won the first test atleast) had our batters shown a bit more application and patience. The lack of concentration & discipline and the inability to handle pressure is partly down to playing too many meaningless ODIs. If anything we should be playing less one-dayers and more test matches. Test is where your true class comes out as a player

Re: Flintoff to retire from Test cricket at end of Ashes 2009

Flintoff bowling at 93-94 mph in his last test series. It's a shame this guy is retiring, I will miss watching him bowl.