England’s Collingwood quits tests at the top

SYDNEY, (Reuters) – Paul Collingwood is to quit test   cricket after the fifth Ashes encounter, the England batsman   said yesterday, going out on a high after helping to retain   the famous urn in Australia for the first time in 24 years.

Paul Collingwood

The 34-year-old will continue as captain of England’s   world champion Twenty20 team and in the one-day team, which   will contest the World Cup in India, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh   starting next month.

“In many ways it’s a sad moment, it many ways it’s the   perfect moment,” he told reporters after England moved to the   brink of a first Ashes series triumph Australia since 1986-87   on Thursday.

“This is what I’ve been playing the game of cricket for is   to be in a position like this against Australia, in Australia.

“I’ve fought hard and given it my all.”

Collingwood has scored 4,259 runs with 10 centuries at an   average of 40.56 and taken 17 wickets in 68 matches since his   test debut against Sri Lanka in December 2003 but has   struggled with the bat on the current tour.

Averaging just 15.54 over his last 10 tests and 13.83 in   the ongoing Ashes series, the popular right-hander said it was   time to give younger players a chance.

“This England team will progress without me and get better   and better,” he added.

“To be involved in a great England   team, with some very special players, very special characters,   it’s a very proud place to be.

“It’s hard to leave but it’s definitely the right time.”

Although his performances with the bat have been sub-par   in the series, Collingwood has taken some key catches with his   athletic fielding and he bowled out Australian danger man Mike   Hussey on Tuesday.

What looks like being his final test innings was another   disappointment, however, with a rash charge down the wicket to   a Michael Beer delivery in sending a miscued shot ballooning   into the hands of Ben Hilfenhaus for just 13.

“I knew that was probably going to be my last innings and   I was hoping it was going to be a fairy tale and I’d crack a   hundred, but I don’t have fairy tales,” he said.

An honest, dogged determination had previously   characterised his batting, not least when he ground out his   career best 206 at Adelaide on the ill-fated 2006-07 Ashes Tour.

“Last time we were here, I managed to make runs and we got   beat 5-0,” he said. “I much prefer it this way around.

“In many ways, I’ve overachieved, averaging 40, I’ve   scrapped it out, and there have been ups and downs but I   wouldn’t change a thing about the way my career has gone.”

His place in the cricketing history books is assured,   however, not for his test career but as the first England   captain to win a global one-day tournament at the third   Twenty20 World Cup in West Indies last year.