Thursday 6 May 2010

Brett Lee - Retirement too late?

Brett Lee was a fast bowler - there is no denying that. From the start of his career as a teenager, he terrorized batsmen with his close-to-100mph speeds, shattering confidences and helmets. And for a while that was enough. He had the support of good bowlers for most of his Test career - the likes of McGrath and Warne - so just being fast was enough for him to claim a decent amount of Test wicket.

Since the retirement of these greats Lee had to become a different sort of bowler. And he did. His Test average after McGrath's retirement in 2007 is actually better than his overall Test average (and hence his average prior to that time). However his problem has been with injuries, rather than his technique, or skill as a fast bowler in his early 30s.

Since the end of 2008, Lee has played 4 T20, 13 ODI and no Test matches. His retirement from the Test arena this year seems to raise the question "Why not last year, Brett?". In his absence Bollinger, Johnson, Hilfenhaus, Siddle and Hauritz have all put in top notch performances. Performances that may have been better if they hadn't been looking over their shoulder worrying if they would have a place in the Test team when Lee returned from injury.

Player Mat Inns Overs Mdns Runs Wkts Ave 5 10
Bollinger 8 16 294.1 62 903 39 23.15 2 0
Johnson 17 32 651 119 2231 81 27.54 3 1
Siddle 14 26 493.2 136 1473 51 28.88 2 0
Hilfenhaus 9 16 328.5 75 1040 34 30.58 0 0
Hauritz 12 23 490 104 1477 44 33.56 2 0

Likewise, Harris, McKay, Watson and Bollinger have all done exceptionally well in the ODIs.


Player Mat Inns Overs Mdns Runs Wkts Ave 4 5
Harris 12 11 98.1 9 450 29 15.51 0 2
McKay 10 10 87.4 10 403 22 18.31 1 0
Watson 36 26 192 6 959 45 21.31 1 0
Bollinger 20 20 163.4 18 722 33 21.87 1 2
Lee 13 12 104.1 7 501 21 23.85 0 1
Johnson 40 38 343.1 18 1767 63 28.04 2 0
Hauritz 44 42 339 11 1566 50 31.32 1 0
Siddle 15 14 110 8 499 14 35.64 0 0
Hopes 41 37 264.1 11 1228 33 37.21 0 0
Bracken 24 24 213 17 1002 26 38.53 0 0
Hilfenhaus 14 14 119.2 10 691 17 40.64 0 0

Surely retiring from the Test side to focus on ODIs and T20s was just an attempt to keep playing a game that his body no longer seems capable of continuing with. Many other bowlers continue with Tests and retire from the shorter version of the game, perhaps because playing Test match cricket seems to still capture the hearts and minds of the players and the fans. Where Test matches are a full length movie epsiode, ODIs are more like an episode of a drama TV show, and T20s like the Simpsons. Sure, watching the Simpsons is great, but at the end of the day, they don't give an Oscar to the best actor in any given Simpsons episode. 

This latest injury to Brett Lee must surely lead to him considering retirement from all forms of the game, which these days isn't necessarily the death knell that it used to be. It simply means that he can focus on the IPL while he still has a few years of moderate short term bowling left in him.

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