News Update - Warner To Retire After Winning The Ashes !!!!!!!!!!!
Warner to retire from Test cricket this summer
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ByDaniel Brettig
June 3, 2023 — 7.40pm
recently moved to quell speculation about Warner’s future by indicating that the national selectors viewed him as a key part of the team for both the World Test Championship final against India, to begin on Wednesday at the Oval, and the Ashes series to follow.
But Warner’s indication that he will call time on his Test career at home serves to further clarify matters. Across his past 19 Tests since the onset of COVID-19, Warner has cobbled just 914 runs at 29.48, against a career mark of 45.57.
“You’ve got to score runs. I’ve always said the [2024 T20] World Cup would probably be my final game,” Warner told reporters in Beckenham, on London’s outskirts, on Saturday.
“I probably owe it to myself and my family - if I can score runs here and continue to play back in Australia - I can definitely say I won’t be playing that West Indies series.
“If I can get through this [WTC final and Ashes] and make the Pakistan series I will definitely finish up then.”
The third and final Test against Pakistan begins on January 3 next year at the SCG.
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Perhaps not since Steve Waugh announced his intention to retire from Tests at the outset of the 2003-04 summer has an Australian cricketer of similar standing shaped to give themselves such a long final lap when their place has come under question.
Typically, a senior player will indicate their intention to retire a few days before their final game, so often the New Year’s Test in Sydney. Another recent exception was Warner’s former opening partner Chris Rogers, who made it clear well beforehand that the 2015 Ashes tour would be his last.
Australia’s team to England features numerous players very much at the back end of their Test careers, from Warner and Usman Khawaja at the top of the order, to Steve Smith, Mitchell Starc, Nathan Lyon and Josh Hazlewood.
Alongside Warner, the touring party also features the back-up openers Marcus Harris (who also toured England in 2019) and Matt Renshaw.
Warner said his impending retirement from Test cricket wouldn’t change his mindset heading into the WTC final and Ashes.
“I’ve played every game like it’s my last,” Warner said. “I enjoy being around the guys. I love being part of the team and being that ball of energy in the group. I’ll keep working as hard as I can to get there. It starts this Test match against India. I’m really looking forward to that challenge and then the challenge against India.”
Warner has a lot of work ahead of him to ensure he is selected for the home summer. His last Ashes series in the UK yielded just 95 runs at an average of 9.5.
He said he’s ready for the challenge against Stuart Broad, who had his measure last time, should the pace bowler be picked by England.
From 103 Tests, Warner has amassed 8158 runs at an average of 45.57 with a highest score of 335 not out against Pakistan at the Adelaide Oval in 2019.
Warner sits seventh on the all-time list of most Test runs by an Australian, behind Matthew Hayden in sixth (8625) and Michael Clarke in fifth (8643). Ricky Ponting tops the Australian list with 13,378 runs at 51.85.
Warner has made 25 Test hundreds, putting him eighth overall for Australian batsmen.