South Wales Echo

Broad wants more after joining 500 club

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STUART Broad has no intention of walking off into the sunset any time soon, insisting his 500th Test wicket may not be the last historic landmark he reaches in an England shirt.

Broad started the month “frustrated, gutted and angry” after being overlooked for the first match of the summer against the West Indies but ends it riding higher than ever as player of the series in his side’s 2-1 win.

In helping England to victory in the last two Tests he has scooped 16 wickets at 10.93, become just the seventh member in one of the most exclusive clubs in cricket and forced a 269-run victory with just the third 10-wicket match of his career.

Throw in a sparkling 62 with the bat in the decider and Broad has clearly had the time of his life since putting the earlier dent to his ego aside.

It is far from unusual to wonder how much more a 34-year-old fast bowler has to offer, not least one with 140 Tests on the clock across 13 years on the circuit, but Broad need only look across the dressing room for inspiratio­n.

James Anderson is almost four years older and still going strong on 589 scalps, with no sign that either man is slowing down.

“A couple of weeks ago I was in a bit of a thinking place – I couldn’t leave a cricket ground where I’d been left out. I thought, ‘where am I going here?’. But I’m glad I stayed strong because I’m very happy two weeks later. To get to 500 is a special feeling,” he said.

“You always hear ex-sportsmen saying they knew when it was time to go, they lost that feeling. Well, I’ve still got it in abundance. I’m someone who looks pretty shortterm but at the moment I feel fresh, I feel fit.”

 ?? DAN MULLAN ?? Stuart Broad celebrates after taking the wicket of Kraigg Brathwaite of West Indies for his 500th Test wicket
DAN MULLAN Stuart Broad celebrates after taking the wicket of Kraigg Brathwaite of West Indies for his 500th Test wicket

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