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Hayden announces his retirement
by CricketArchive Staff Reporter


Player:ML Hayden

DateLine: 13th January 2009

 

Matthew Hayden, Australia's most successful opening batsman has decided to step down from the team before he was pushed. Hayden, who was dropped from the limited-overs squads last Thursday, had initially hoped to quit after the Ashes, but confirmed his retirement at the Gabba on Tuesday morning.

 

He will be given a public farewell at tonight's Twenty20 international at the Gabba, where he will appear at the innings break. Hayden said his retirement was from all representative cricket, effective immediately. He reached his decision on Saturday and said he had no concerns about what was to come in the next stage of his life.

 

Hayden, 37, had a difficult summer and managed only 149 runs at 16.55 from five Tests while hearing pleas for a significantly younger player to replace him. He was hindered by a heel injury in the off-season and never regained his spark, which was a shame considering his major contribution to the game in Australia over the past decade.

 

The first of Hayden's 103 Tests came in South Africa in 1993-94, when he replaced the injured Mark Taylor, but it was not until 2000 that he was finally able to secure a regular spot in the national side. He went to India and scored an Australia-record 549 runs in three matches and his place was not in danger until the 2005 Ashes tour. Ending that series with a century at The Oval, he produced four hundreds in consecutive games for the second time in his career.

 

No Australian opener has scored more Test runs than Hayden's 8625 - at an average of 50.73 - and his 30 hundreds place him behind Ricky Ponting and Steve Waugh on the local list. The final time he reached three figures was against India in Adelaide 12 months ago. In the one-day arena there were 161 matches, 6133 runs, 10 hundreds and two World Cups.

 

Calls for Hayden to step down grew louder through the Australian summer and by the time he reached Sydney he was under immense pressure to make a decision on his future. He was given a standing ovation when he walked off the SCG, having made an unconvincing 39 in the second innings, but gave no hint on which way he would go.

 

With Hayden's departure, Australia need to decide on a new partner for Simon Katich for the upcoming Test tour of South Africa and then the Ashes. Contenders will include Phil Jaques, Victoria's Chris Rogers and Phillip Hughes, a 20-year-old left-hander from New South Wales.

 

As Hayden made his announcement he was watched by the Australian Twenty20 squad, which lost him from its ranks last week, the former Queensland captain Jimmy Maher, Cricket Australia's general manager of cricket Michael Brown and the rugby union international David Croft.

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