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| Player: | JL Langer, MC Cowdrey, CG Greenidge, MA Taylor, CH Lloyd, GD McGrath, ML Hayden, DL Haynes, M Ntini, SK Warne |
Australian opener Justin Langer said a tearful farewell to Test cricket Friday after a seesawing career in which he was repeatedly dropped by selectors then earned redemption to retire on his own terms.
The 36-year-old scored 7,696 runs in 105 Tests at an average of 45.27
runs, giving him the 20th highest Test aggregate in Test cricket and
the sixth highest for an Australian.
The statistics show Langer scored more Test runs than legends such as
Colin Cowdrey, Gordon Greenidge, Mark Taylor and Clive Lloyd, yet he
often struggled to retain a spot in the Australian team.
It was frustrating for Langer, whose devotion to his baggy green cap
was so great that team-mate Glenn McGrath remarked Friday that the
batsman would have to find something else to wear to bed in his
retirement.
Langer persevered to overcome the early perceptions about his batting
and was named Wisden Cricketer of the Year in 2001.
Langer has formed part of Australia's most prolific opening partnership
with Matthew Hayden, combining for 5,654 runs at an average of more
than 51. Only the West Indian duo of Greenidge and Desmond Haynes made
more runs (6,482) than Langer and Hayden, but they played together for
13 years while the Australian duo joined forces only in 2001.
In early 2006, Langer was almost forced into premature retirement from
cricket when he was hit by a Makhaya Ntini bouncer in Johannesburg and
was taken to hospital with concussion. Doctors told him another blow to
the head could be fatal. But he was determined to reclaim the Ashes urn
that Australia handed to England in 2005, saying "we're the team that
lost the Ashes and we're going to make sure we're the team that gets
them back".
He achieved the goal in emphatic fashion Friday, when he and opening
partner Matthew Hayden easily reached the total Australia needed to
complete a series whitewash against their old foe.
"It was an amazing moment in my life," Langer said. "That's probably
the perfect script, to be there when the winning runs are scored with
my opening partner, 5-0 up in a Test series."
After the match, Langer stood with his head in his hands crying as the
Sydney Cricket Ground applauded him and fellow Test retirees Shane
Warne and Glenn McGrath.
Langer admitted emotions had been raging during his final match.
"There's no denying when the national anthem was on and I saw my family
up in the box and looked around for the last time before we went out to
field, I knew that I was pretty upset," he said. "It probably affected
the way I played the first day. I dropped three catches. That's good.
I'd be upset if I wasn't a bit upset about it."
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