The Daily Telegraph - Sport

Kevin Pietersen

‘My life is all about saving animals now’

- Nick Hoult CRICKET NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT

The moment of Kevin Pietersen’s retirement, caught behind off littleknow­n Pakistani all-rounder Faheem Ashraf at the Sharjah Internatio­nal Stadium last week, was one of the few low-key events of a career spent in the headlines.

It caught many by surprise as word seeped out on social media that Pietersen had played his last game, but the man himself had moved on long ago. Pietersen knew it was time to go last year, but honoured contracts already signed in Australia and the Pakistan Super League. Now back at home in Surrey, he is very much looking forward to the next phase in his life, one he hopes will be spent in conservati­on, a world he has become immersed in since his sacking by England four years ago.

Introduced to wildlife preservati­on when Mark Boucher, the former South Africa cricketer, took him on a rhino-tagging operation, Pietersen has thrown himself into fundraisin­g for projects working with endangered animals in Africa and India. He set up his own company, Sorai (Save Our Rhino in Africa and India) which started with branded bats, but has moved into clothing merchandis­e online. The profits go to different conservati­on charities.

Pietersen has opened one store in Mosman, Sydney, and is looking to expand through retail deals in India over the next few weeks. Documentar­ies are planned in Africa and India as Pietersen aims to spread awareness.

“I knew from mid-to-late last year that my appetite to improve as a player had gone. I just wanted to honour these contracts and then that was it. It was the inability to get myself up for practice, to get better and work on my game. I just thought that was it, my time is up,” he tells The Daily Telegraph. “Over the last three or four years I have got myself heavily involved in conservati­on in

Africa. It is not an overnight thing. I have my heart and soul back in Africa in conservati­on. It is about giving back and trying to save animals, particular­ly the rhino, from extinction and, because I have something that is bigger and better to go into, it has fastforwar­ded my decision to retire and made all my emotions towards it really positive. “I have got something which is going to make me feel a better person if I can do something that is much more important than sport. I was lucky to be a profession­al sportsman and now I can apply that to bigger and better things. It is about using my skill set and connection­s to raise the money, work and be hands on helping to stop poaching. We launched Sorai online and sold all our products out in two hours. There is a huge appetite in India from some big retailers. We want to move in to South Africa, then the UK and UAE. It is a slow process because I don’t want a lot of people involved, we want to raise as much as we can for the animals. I don’t want to raise money to pay for people in offices to have coffees and claim petrol for going to meetings. This is about getting the money to where it will do the most good.”

One offshoot of his England career ending has been Pietersen reconnecti­ng with his African roots. He no longer feels he has to ignore his South African heritage in order to try to fit in to an England dressing room. “It has given me a calmness, peace in my life to spend time in the bush where I am most happy,” he says. “If I had to choose between a Test hundred at Lord’s or being in the bush on foot with the animals, I will take the animals every single day. But I remember that the Test hundreds at Lord’s have given me an incredible opportunit­y to use connection­s I built through my cricketing career. I am grateful to England for giving me the opportunit­y, but now I think I can use that to have a positive impact in a different way.”

Pietersen says he has had offers from franchises to stay involved in cricket and has spoken in the past of wanting to work with the

England one-day side. He has had conversati­ons with players in recent weeks trying to persuade them not to give up red-ball cricket, believing Adil Rashid and Alex Hales are wrong to concentrat­e on one form of cricket.

“These guys retiring from red-ball cricket to pursue whiteball cricket are making big mistakes. Your value decreases when you jump out of your whites. I have spoken to a couple of youngsters and tried to persuade them to continue to play red-ball cricket because it keeps your value.

“I was lucky enough to play 100 Tests, but if you have only played a handful of Tests and give up on red-ball cricket you are viewed differentl­y from someone who has fought through a long career and been through the ups and downs and scored Test hundreds. It puts you in a different league.

“The amazing thing is that, despite all the franchise leagues, Test cricket between the big nations is stronger than T20. I did not believe that until I was lying in my bedroom in Australia during the Big Bash and was fuming South Africa versus India was not being shown on television. The same thing happened in Dubai when I could not see South Africa versus Australia. T20s were on but I was not interested in watching them. I wanted to see a big Test series. I think that is where Test cricket will be in future years – just the stronger nations playing.”

It was noticeable at the weekend that the England Twitter feed shared a picture of Pietersen celebratin­g a Test hundred and thanked him for all the memories.

Pietersen was touched by private messages from former team-mates and opponents. It will take time for the wounds to heal with others and some relationsh­ips will probably never be repaired. Pietersen accepts some of the blame, but also believes there was a failure to understand how hard it can be for an outsider to fit into the world of English cricket.

“An England dressing room is quite an interestin­g place to be as a foreigner. You feel accepted, but you know you are only a stone’s throw away from being tossed aside. I played my whole career knowing every single time I failed I was ‘South African-born Kevin Pietersen’, but every time I played well I was English.

“I probably said things I shouldn’t have but I was always fighting for my career. When you are a foreigner in a dressing room people are quick to judge.”

Where once Pietersen was an Indian Premier League rebel, chasing the dollar at the expense of his England career, now the England and Wales Cricket Board encourages its players to go to India. Possibly it is because they do not want to create another Pietersen and a dressing-room schism. “If you now asked the powers that be who were around in my time, and they were honest, they would say I was ahead of my time [about the IPL]. When Australia were fighting with their cricket board I was in communicat­ion with those players and I said make sure you do it all together. Do not let anybody jump out of the circle of trust because if you do and go alone yourself, you will end up like me.”

‘I played knowing every single time I failed I was South African-born Kevin Pietersen’

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