November 8, 2024

After international retirement, James Anderson open to play franchise T20s at 42

After international retirement, James Anderson open to play franchise T20s at 42

He may not have played a T20 match for nearly 10 years but James Anderson is not downplaying the possibility of a return to white-ball cricket at 42, a month after he brought down the curtains on his legendary Test career.

Still in ‘denial’ after his 188-Test career came to a halt at Lord’s against West Indies in July, Anderson says he is not done with his playing days and may look for a brief foray back to white-ball cricket. Anderson, who took up a stint as a bowling mentor for the English Test side might not been seen in the role after the upcoming home series against Sri Lanka.

“I might be in a bit of denial because I’m well aware I won’t play for England again, but I’ve still not made a decision on my actual cricket career,” Anderson told The Press Association.

“I watch The Hundred and see the ball swinging around in the first 20 balls and I think: ‘I can do that, I can still do that.’ I don’t know if that is a viable option, to maybe see if I could do a job in white-ball cricket. Franchise cricket is something I’ve never done,” Anderson elaborated on The Final Word podcast.

“I still feel [playing domestically] is not off the table. The way that my body feels, the way I have been bowling in recent years, I still feel I could potentially have something to offer on that front,” Anderson added.

Festive offer

Anderson last featured in a T20 in August 2014 for Lancashire before nearly serving out a decade exclusively for red-ball cricket. Anderson picked up 18 wickets in his 19-match T20I career. He also not featured in a List A game since 2019 and last played for England at the 2015 ODI World Cup.

Besides retiring as their most prolific Test bowler, Anderson also finished as the highest wicket-taker for England in ODIs with 269 scalps from 194 appearances.

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