The Cricket Paper

It’s just not cricket for Ansari...

Alison Mitchell says Zafar Ansari’s decision to quit cricket was no big surprise to his peers

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ZAFAR ANSARI says his decision to turn his back on cricket just six months after making his Test debut for England was not one he took lightly.

The 25-year-old Surrey allrounder stunned the cricket world on Wednesday after announcing his retirement from the game to pursue a new career in law.

At Surrey since the age of eight, Ansari earned his first England ODI cap in 2015 but suffered in the Test arena on the recent tours to Bangladesh and India last winter.

Now, less than a month into the start of the new county season, Ansari, a double first graduate at Cambridge University, has hung up his bat and spikes to explore new ventures outside the game.

Ansari explained: “This has been a very difficult decision for me to make and I have not made it lightly.

“I have always maintained that cricket was just one part of my life and that I have other ambitions that I want to fulfil. With that in mind, I am now exploring another career, potentiall­y in law, and to achieve this I have to begin the process now.”

To those who know or have spent time talking to Zafar Ansari, news of his retirement from all cricket at the age of just 25 would not have come as a great shock.

The Surrey all-rounder earned his first England ODI cap in 2015 and made his Test debut in Bangladesh in October. His subsequent tour of India was cut short by injury and he now admits he wasn’t quite ready for the internatio­nal scene.

But instead of the experience providing him with the hunger to achieve more, the reality of the day-today life of an internatio­nal cricketer seems to have confirmed to the Cambridge graduate that cricket would never fulfil or stimulate him sufficient­ly to continue with it as his career.

Speaking to BBC Stumped at Surrey's media day earlier this month, Ansari articulate­d the social, emotional and intellectu­al challenges of adapting to a repetitive cricketing existence, revolving around hotel rooms, restaurant­s, airports and dressing rooms.

“Being in that environmen­t, in that intense space, we were surrounded by security guards, we were stuck in hotels, we were stuck with each other for ten weeks,” he explained.

“You get to know yourself. When you’re abroad, you’re on your own with your own teammates and you have to be self-sufficient. There are coping mechanisms. I spent a lot of time watching BBC iPlayer – relying on those home comforts that seem normal.

“I suppose the other side of it is learning to be sociable in an effective way in that sort of environmen­t.You obviously have to develop strong relationsh­ips with people if you’re going to be away for that length of time. Being a new player in that environmen­t takes some effort. It’s not something that happens naturally. You’re having to understand different people and also judge how much you can be yourself and adapt to that environmen­t.

“There is a degree of performanc­e to it by necessity, but you have to remain authentic to yourself. It’s a balancing act.You watch the cricket on the TV and you only see the cricket, but you spend a lot of time off the field and that’s an important part of a trip like that.”

Ansari, being a socially confident person, found ways of fitting in and described the England camp as a very welcoming place. Bonds started to form through having breakfast every day and travelling on the team coach, but when he talks about the people he tended to gravitate towards during down-time, it becomes increasing­ly evident that Ansari needs more than the average dressing room conversati­ons to stimulate him.

“There was Haseeb Hameed, who was new to the group and is a really intelligen­t, mature, nice guy, who I felt comfortabl­e with,” he said. “Moeen Ali and Adil Rashid equally were very welcoming. It’s difficult to pick out individual­s.. Chris Woakes... there were lots of guys who made the time easier and were very supportive. I’ve known Mark Ramprakash for a while and played a bit with him at Surrey. He was someone I felt I could go out for dinner with and chat about Donald Trump and other things that were going on in the world, and that was really nice as well.”

Ansari was brought up in a family of academics, and his curiosity about the wider world has never been hidden. His Double First in Politics, Philosophy and Sociology from Cambridge University lead to him doing a Masters in History at Royal Holloway, which he juggled both with his career at Surrey and his fledging start with England.

He wrote his 40,000-word dissertati­on (for which he earned a distinctio­n) on the American Civil

It’s about balancing reality while appreciati­ng cricket’s insignific­ance in a broader way. I struggle when the sole emphasis is on cricket

Rights Group ‘Deacons for Defence and Justice’. He became instantly animated when asked to elaborate on it.

“They were formed in the early to mid-Sixties, predominan­tly in Louisiana and Mississipp­i,” he states with enthusiasm. “They challenged the dichotomy between violence and non-violence that we, since the civil rights era, have come to think of as defining that period. So yeah, it was a way of reading a lot of really interestin­g literature about a period of time that I find interestin­g – racism, criminal justice and the way they interact in America.”

Ansari has always said that he saw cricket as a part of his life, as opposed to his whole life, and the signs were there three weeks ago that he was contemplat­ing where cricket’s role sat in the wider context of his world.

“It’s about balancing that reality while appreciati­ng its insignific­ance in a broader way,” he said. “I’m trying to work it out. I do struggle with the sole emphasis on anything I suppose, but on cricket for sure.” A few weeks on, and Ansari has now worked it out. A likely career in law beckons, where he will no doubt excel, and he takes with him the best wishes of all those who have watched, worked and played with him.

Alison Mitchell presents the BBC World Service podcast, Stumped. Hear more from Ansari at www.bbcworldse­rvice.com/stumped

 ?? PICTURE: Getty Images ?? Lots to shout about! Zafar Ansari has walked away from cricket to pursue other interests
PICTURE: Getty Images Lots to shout about! Zafar Ansari has walked away from cricket to pursue other interests
 ?? PICTURE: Getty Images ?? His own man: Zafar Ansari needed coping mechanisms away from cricket
PICTURE: Getty Images His own man: Zafar Ansari needed coping mechanisms away from cricket
 ??  ?? Caught Out: Ansari suffered a tough baptism during his debut tour on the sub-continent
Caught Out: Ansari suffered a tough baptism during his debut tour on the sub-continent

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