The Scotsman

Cook admits ‘edge had gone’ in last six months

- By DAVID CLOUGH

Alastair Cook considered retirement for six months before deciding the time had come to quit England duty.

England’s record runscorer announced he will call time on his internatio­nal career after the fifth Specsavers Test with India at the Oval this week.

Cook said: “It’s hard to put it into words but over the last six months there have been signs in my mind this was going to happen.

“I always had been mentally tough and had that edge to everything I’ve done and that edge had kind of gone.”

The 33-year-old eventually made the decision ahead of last week’s fourth Test with India, where England secured a series win.

He informed captain Joe Root before the game and head coach Trevor Bayliss while it was going on, but the rest of the squad found out in a beer-fuelled emotional speech afterwards.

“I told Rooty before the game and then told Trevor during the game,” Cook said. “I was a couple of beers in which I needed to be otherwise I would have cried more than I actually did. I managed to hold it together.

“At the end of the game I said, ‘It might be good news, it might be sad for some, it might be happy for others but it’s time and I have done my bit. I will play one more game’.

“There was a little bit of silence, then Mo [Ali] said something, everybody laughed and then it was forgotten about.”

Cook will leave the England set-up as the country’s most decorated player, even if he was not as talented as some of his contempora­ries.

“I can look back and say, I became the best I could become, that actually means quite a lot to me,” he said. “I have never been the most talented cricketer, I don’t pretend I was but I definitely think I got everything out of my ability.

“Everyone was talking as if I’d died. It’s nice when you hear so many nice words said about you. Hopefully this week can go well, and if I can play a really good innings that would be fantastic.”

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