Sport

James Anderson bows out as England crush Windies

07:49 am on 13 July 2024

James Anderson of England appeals successfully for the LBW wicket of Kane Williamson of New Zealand during day one of the first test match between New Zealand and England at Bay Oval in Tauranga, New Zealand on Thursday February 16, 2023. Copyright photo: Aaron Gillions / www.photosport.nz Photo: Aaron Gillions / www.photosport.nz

England's James Anderson brought down the curtain on his stellar international career by taking a wicket against West Indies on the third day of the first test at Lord's as he helped his side wrap up a comfortable win by an innings and 114 runs.

Anderson looked uncharacteristically emotional before the start of play as he walked out to a guard of honour and a standing ovation from the crowd in his 188th and final test.

But the seamer quickly got to work and had Joshua Da Silva (9) caught behind in his second over of the day, finding just enough movement to draw the outside edge and pick up his 704th test wicket to finish with match figures of 4-58.

Photo: PHOTOSPORT

The 41-year-old retires with a record number of test wickets by an England bowler and the most by any seam bowler. He is third on the all-time list for test wickets behind Australian Shane Warne (708) and Sri Lanka's Muttiah Muralitharan (800).

Anderson, clutching a pint of Guinness in the dressing room, told Sky Sports he was still trying to hold back tears at the end of his final match.

"This morning was quite emotional with the two teams lined up and the reaction from the crowd was pretty special," he said.

"Playing for England is the best job in the world. I've been privileged to do it for a long time."

England captain Ben Stokes said the match was a near-perfect start to the summer, particularly with debutants Gus Atkinson and Jamie Smith turning in impressive performances.

"We dominated the game," Stokes said. "But we had to work really hard for that. We went through periods where we had to make things happen. So we are very pleased."

Heavy defeat

Anderson's farewell would always have drawn the headlines, but there was not much competition given the lack of any real contest in a little more than two days of play.

Will Ben Stokes (left) get to join James Anderson and the rest of the England team on the Ashes tour? Photo: Photosport

His fourth wicket of the match dented West Indies' slim chances of making England bat again, though the match was really lost on the first day when the visitors slumped to 121 all out.

It was Atkinson who did the damage with a man of the match performance, bowling with genuine pace and looking very much at home in international cricket with a pair of five-wicket hauls.

With an unlikely 171 runs needed at the start of play just to make England bat again, Alzarri Joseph (8) decided to go down swinging, clubbing Atkinson back over his head for four amid some wild swipes.

He then top-edged Atkinson to Ben Duckett on the leg-side boundary, taking Atkinson to 10 wickets on his test debut.

Shamar Joseph (3) was not far behind, clean bowled by Atkinson as the tailender missed a straight yorker with an ugly hack across the line.

Gudakesh Motie put up the only resistance and his 31 not out was West Indies' highest individual score in the match.

Motie was involved in two of the highlights of the day, first driving Atkinson to the cover boundary to draw a long chase and full-length dive from Anderson to save a single run.

Motie then seemingly handed Anderson his 705th test wicket on a plate, driving the ball straight back to the bowler but he spilled it.

The England fast bowler James Anderson during the second test against New Zealand. Photo: PHOTOSPORT

Anderson did not get a better chance for a final wicket and Atkinson - who finished with a match total of 12-106 - wrapped things up when Jayden Seales (8) holed out to Duckett as West Indies were all out for 136.

West Indies skipper Kraigg Brathwaite said his team did not have a lot of time to reflect ahead of the second test starting at Trent Bridge next Thursday.

"Disappointed, but it's gone now," he told reporters. "We have two test matches left in this series and we have got to look ahead and we have got to stay mentally tough." (Reporting by Sam Tobin; Editing by Ken Ferris)

James Anderson's career

Born: July 30, 1982, Burnley, England

Right-arm fast bowler, left-hand batsman

Teams: England, Lancashire

Tests: 188

Debut: v Zimbabwe, Lord's, 2003

Wickets: 704

Five-wicket hauls: 32

Average: 26.45

Best bowling: 7-42 v West Indies, 2017

  • Makes debut for Lancashire in 2001 and takes 50 first-class wickets in his first full domestic campaign the following year.
  • Becomes youngest player to take a hat-trick for Lancashire, in May 2003.
  • Makes test debut for England a week later when they play Zimbabwe at Lord's and takes five wickets in the first innings.
  • Called up to England's 2003 World Cup squad. Anderson would play for England in three more World Cups, the last in 2015.
  • Won the Ashes in 2009 but really comes into his own in the 2010-11 series in Australia where he took a series-leading 24 wickets as England won their first Ashes in Australia for 24 years.
  • Member of the England squad who won their first Twenty20 World Cup in 2010.
  • Takes 21 wickets when India tour England, helping his side whitewash the visitors 4-0. England become the number one test side in the world.
  • Takes 500th test wicket in 2017, dismissing West Indies' Kraigg Brathwaite at Lord's.
  • The Pavilion End of Old Trafford is renamed the James Anderson End in 2017.
  • Named in ICC's test team of the decade in 2020.
  • Claimed 1,000th first-class wicket while playing for Lancashire against Kent at Old Trafford in 2021.
  • Took his 700th test wicket against India in Dharamsala in March 2024 by dismissing Kuldeep Yadav.
  • Signs off from international cricket with his 704th and final wicket against West Indies, finishing his career with 188 test caps, second only to India's Sachin Tendulkar (200).

- Reuters