Cricket News / Usman Khawaja to retire from International Cricket after SCG Ashes Test

Key Points
- Usman Khawaja confirmed he will retire from international cricket after the fifth Ashes Test at the SCG, ending a 15-year career.
- He scored over 8,000 international runs, including 16 Test centuries, and was named ICC Test Cricketer of the Year in 2023.
- Khawaja made the announcement with his family present, recalling his journey, sacrifices.
Sydney, Jan 2: Veteran Australia batter Usman Khawaja
announced on Friday that he will retire from international cricket after the
fifth Ashes Test against England at the Sydney Cricket Ground.
Khawaja called a
press conference and made the announcement with his family by his side two days
out from the match, ahead of the team's net session with the Aussies aiming to
claim another 12 World Test Championship points and finish the series as 4-1 victors.
“I’m here to announce
today that I will be retiring from all international cricket after the SCG Test
match,” Khawaja told the press.
“God through cricket
has given me far more than I could have imagine. He’s given me memories I’ll
carry forever, friendship that goes well beyond the game, and lessons that
shaped me, who I am, off the field.
“But no career
belongs to one person. I obviously had a lot of help. To my parents, thank you
for your sacrifices that never made the highlights reel.”
Khawaja informed his
Australia teammates only moments earlier ahead of their training session two
days out from the series finale against England.
In a career spanning
15 years, Khawaja has amassed over 8000 international runs across formats,
while featuring in 87 Tests, 40 ODIs, and nine T20Is.
He retires as one of
Australia's most prolific run-scorers; 30 more in his farewell Test will see
him pass Michael Hussey's tally of 6,235 into 14th among Australian men.
Khawaja brings the
curtain down on his career as one of only 18 Australians to have scored more
than 15 Test centuries, finishing with 16 hundreds in the longest format. He
also leaves the game with 49 limited-overs appearances, including two ODI
centuries to his name.
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✨The left-hander
fittingly bows out in his home city of Sydney, where he made his Test debut
against England in 2011. It was also at the SCG that Khawaja reignited his
career as a 35-year-old, smashing twin centuries against England in early 2022
when Travis Head was sidelined with Covid.
It led to a final
career spark, hitting seven centuries in his first two years back in the side,
and a World Test Championship win in 2023.
In 2023, Khawaja was
named ICC Test Cricketer of the Year and Shane Warne Test Cricketer of the
Year, and played a key role in Australia's World Test Championship triumph.
Khawaja told coach
Andrew McDonald after the fourth Test in Melbourne he would finish up in
Sydney.
Also read: Harmanpreet Kaur Leads India’s DramaticTurnaround in Final T20I against Sri Lanka
"It's been tough; I've just wanted to tell everyone. I told teammates just then. I didn't think I'd get emotional, but I teared up straightaway, and I had to compose myself. I finally composed myself and got out what I wanted to say.
"I never thought
I'd be the guy that would cry when he retired, but I cried straightaway. It
just shows what it means to me. My journey has been different to a lot of
cricketers in the Australian cricket team. All that emotion built up," he
said.
Khawaja will continue
to play for the Brisbane Heat in the BBL and also outlined his intention to
also remain available for Queensland's Sheffield Shield side.
(IANS)
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