Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Tearful Masakadza quits cricket, but with no regrets

- Agence France-presse sportsdesk@hindustant­imes.com

CHITTAGONG: Zimbabwe captain Hamilton Masakadza could not hol d back t he t e a r s when announcing to his players that Friday’s match against Afghanista­n would be his last in internatio­nals.

The 36-year-old was given a guard of honour by both sides as he came in to bat in Chittagong and then hit 71 off 42 balls to take Zimbabwe to an impressive seven-wicket victory — their first over Afghanista­n — in the Twenty20 match.

Masakadza ended his 18-year internatio­nal career with a blistering five sixes and four fours.

“Obviously it was super special. To lead the team to the win was really special,” he said.

Masakadza, who has played a key role in Zimbabwe’s faltering progress in internatio­nal cricket since making his debut in 2001, acknowledg­ed the emotions got the better of him before the game had even started. “I started tearing a little bit in the morning trying to get through the team talk,” he said. “I am not someone who wears his heart on his sleeve but I think this is the one thing that brought a few emotions out of me. Even when I tried to tell the guys and the team before I made the official announceme­nt, I barely got through three sentences so it’s been a really emotional time for me.”

Masakadza set a world record on his debut against West Indies when he became the youngest Test century scorer at 17 years and 254 days. His record survived barely three months before being broken by Bangladesh’s Mohammad Ashraful. He was also Zimbabwe’s first black player to score a first-class century.

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