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Friday, September 17, 2010

Epic Ashes series confirms Flintoff's legacy


LONDON: Over the course of two glorious summers Andrew Flintoff bowled with pace and fury, hit the ball with power and precision and caught everything in sight in the slips.

To England's enduring delight, the second season coincided with the 2005 Ashes challenge and an epic series nominated by the annual Wisden almanac as the best in Test history.

Flintoff, who retired from all cricket on Thursday at the age of 32 after conceding his battered body had endured enough, towered above his team mates. He scored 402 runs and captured 24 wickets in the finest display by an England all-rounder since Ian Botham performed miracles in the 1981 Ashes series.

England had assembled an excellent team at the midpoint of the decade under the cool, cerebral leadership of Michael Vaughan to combat the all-conquering Australians. But they would not have won the Ashes for the first time in 18 years without Flintoff, who was named man-of-the-series ahead of Shane Warne.

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The athletic, blond giant who tore into the Australian batting and bowling was a far cry from the chubby youngster who made his test debut against South Africa in 1998.

FRAGILE JOINTS

His batting, always essentially orthodox, blossomed and in 2003 he scored a century and three half-centuries in a home series against a good South African side. He remodelled his bowling and with his natural strength and height developed into a genuinely hostile fast bowler.

England won seven Tests in a row against New Zealand and West Indies in 2004 with Flintoff scoring a half-century in each of the victories.
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Already, though, it was clear the unnatural demands of fast bowling were taking a toll on his joints. He needed an operation on his fragile left ankle but recovered in time for the first Test against Ricky Ponting's Australians, a side containing some of the great names in the modern game in Warne, Glenn McGrath, Adam Gilchrist and Mathew Hayden.

In a ferocious opening hour at Lord's, Harmison and Flintoff badly rattled the powerful Australia batting, but dropped catches and a mesmeric spell from McGrath resulted in yet another defeat. Flintoff made nought and three and England's Ashes dream seemed over before it had properly begun.

Somewhere between Lord's and Edgbaston, England and Flintoff rediscovered their winning formula.

Flintoff hit nine sixes in the second test in a total of 141 runs and took seven wickets. England won by two runs and, in a gesture which confirmed Flintoff's new status as England folk hero, his first instinct was to console Australian batsman Brett Lee.

He scored a measured, mature century at Trent Bridge and took five wickets in a spell of sustained pace bowling at the Oval which kick-started England's fightback for the draw they needed to win the series.

Honours and awards and a memorable drinking session after the final Test were followed by the England captaincy when Vaughan was injured. Flintoff led from the front to draw a series in India and was again man-of-the-series for his all-round contribution.

ONE LAST TRIUMPH

Flintoff's sudden decline after the 2006 India tour was startling. He missed most of the season after injuring his ankle in a foolishly prolonged bowling spell against Sri Lanka then led England to a 5-0 defeat in Australia where he was reprimanded by the team management for excessive drinking.

After Vaughan returned as captain, another drunken escapade at the 2007 World Cup in the Caribbean cost Flintoff the England vice-captaincy and the injuries began to multiply.

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There was, though, still one last campaign left for an increasingly battered warrior.

Flintoff announced his retirement from test cricket before the second Ashes test at Lord's last year and then bowled England to victory.
Flintoff's overall Test batting average of 31.77 and 226 wickets at 32.78 are those of a good, rather than a great player. But in 2005, when it mattered most for himself and his country, he stood comparison with Botham, Imran Khan and Keith Miller among the great fast-bowling all-rounders

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