Edinburgh Evening News

Anderson is England’s greatest ever says Hussain

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James Anderson is set for an emotional farewell this summer as England bid farewell to “arguably our greatest ever cricketer”, according to his first internatio­nal captain Nasser Hussain.

Hastened by a frank conversati­on with England Test head coach Brendon McCullum last month, Anderson announced on Saturday he will end his illustriou­s internatio­nal career following the first Test against the West Indies at Lord’s starting on July 10, the same month he celebrates his 42nd birthday.

Anderson told his Tailenders podcast it would be “a stretch” to feature in the 2025/26 Ashes so McCullum and captain Ben Stokes will look to the future and integrate younger seam bowling options into the England team sooner rather than later.

But Hussain, who led England when Anderson made his ODI debut in December 2002 and his Test bow in May 2003, insisted the country’s record wicket-taker and appearance-maker is still worth his place in the side.

Hussain told Sky Sports: “It’s fitting he should end at Lord’s. He started [his Test career] at Lord’s against Zimbabwe in 2003, he’s going to finish at Lord’s with 21 years in-between.

“He’s been a magnificen­t cricketer with everything he’s done on and off the field; his fitness, his form, his skill, his will to come back from adversity, it will be a very emotional week at Lord’s.

“But I think it’s a week he deserves, firstly because he deserves to be in that side. He is absolutely in England’s best XI still with the Dukes ball.

“He’s arguably our greatest ever cricketer, he deserves that week from the fans, for the fans and also for himself.”

 ?? ?? James Anderson: a Lord’s farewell
James Anderson: a Lord’s farewell

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