Flintoff expects England to win Ashes without him

Andrew Flintoff predicted England would have no trouble winning the Ashes in Australia “quite convincingly” without him, soon after announcing his retirement from all cricket.

By (AFP)

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Published: Fri 17 Sep 2010, 10:50 AM

Last updated: Mon 6 Apr 2015, 3:00 AM

The 32-year-old all-rounder finally admitted defeat in his longstanding battle against a knee injury that had already forced him into quitting the Test format and meant he had not played any major cricket whatsoever since helping England regain the Ashes at The Oval last year.

For all Flintoff was the central figure in England’s 2005 Ashes triumph, his display, a brilliant fast bowling spell in last year’s second Test against Australia apart, had been tailing off in the closing stages of his career.

And England, in the more than a year since he has been most recently out of international cricket, have drawn a Test series in South Africa, defeated Australia in the World Twenty20 final and in a home one-day series, while besting Bangladesh home and away.

England are also on the verge of completing a ‘treble’ over Pakistan, whom they lead 2-0 in a five-match one-day campaign after Test and Twenty20 series wins this season.

“I think the England side will be fine,” said Flintoff after announcing his retirement on Thursday.

“They’ve beaten Pakistan comprehensively. There’s a big winter coming up.

“They’ve played for a long time without me. I think you’ll find professional sport moves on very, very quickly. That’s what England have done.

“I expect England to go to Australia this winter and beat Australia quite convincingly,” added Flintoff, England’s captain when they were hammered 5-0 on their last tour ‘Down Under’ in 2006/07.

Earlier, Flintoff, an aggressive seamer and big-hitting batsman, said he’d retired on medical grounds ending any hope he might turn out for state side Queensland in Australia’s domestic Twenty20 compeition.

“The decision to end my career came yesterday (Wednesday) after consultation with medical advisers.

“Having been told that my body would no longer stand up to the rigours of cricket, I had no alternative but to retire.”

For all Flintoff’s great deeds on behalf of England, it was clear some of his former team-mates regarded persistent talk about his possible return as an irritating distraction.

Meanwhile his repeated insistence he didn’t like the spotlight away from the game was in contrast to the frequency with which he turned up to just about every endorsement opportunity that came his way.

But there was no denying his importance to the England team in the years of his pomp, an importance in no way reflected by career statistics which, as Flintoff has acknowledged, left him some way short of being classed as one of cricket’s “greats”.

England captain Andrew Strauss, acknowledging Flintoff’s contribution, said: “He was always the ultimate impact cricketer, somebody who on so many occasions stepped up to the plate.

“He would put his body on the line on flat wickets when other bowlers were maybe starting to struggle. Because of the way he bowled, and what he put into it, it was probably not as easy for him to get seven-fors and eight-fors,” the opening batsman added.

“But if you talked to other players around the world, they would always say Andrew was one of the bowlers they least wanted to face — because he could be so hostile.

“We are all striving to gain the respect of our peers,” Strauss said. “Andrew certainly did that.”


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