BSS
  29 Jun 2022, 10:16

Morgan happy to retire rather than be an 'imposter'

LONDON, June 29, 2022 (BSS/AFP) - Eoin Morgan said extending his England
career would have made him feel "an imposter" as the World Cup-winning
captain retired from international cricket on Tuesday.

Morgan, who will continue to play domestic cricket, announced the end of his
time as an international player at Lord's, the scene of England's 2019 50-
over World Cup triumph.

The 35-year-old batsman oversaw England's transformation from a side that
suffered a woeful first-round exit at the 2015 World Cup to one-day kings
four years later.

Dublin-born Morgan bows out as England's all-time leading run-scorer in one-
day international and Twenty20 cricket with 6,957 and 2,458 runs
respectively.

His tally of 225 ODI appearances and 115 in T20Is are also England records.

But Morgan has made just two fifties from his past 28 international innings
across the two white-ball formats and was twice out for nought during
England's recent ODI series away to the Netherlands.

He awoke in Amsterdam last Monday knowing his time as an England cricketer
was up and missed the final match of the series with a groin injury.

Neither the thought of one last England appearance, or the prospect of
staying on until the T20 World Cup in Australia later this year, held any
appeal for Morgan.

"It goes against everything I stand for, I just would have felt like an
imposter," he said, when asked about an England farewell appearance.

"I'm very happy with my decision. The day it hit me I was emotional, it was a
difficult day, but since then I've been very content. I'd reached the end of
the road.

"The World Cup is in October and the feeling that day, it felt a million
miles away."

Morgan has been planning for retirement and will now join Sky television to
commentate on his former team-mates during England's white-ball matches
against India and South Africa next month.

In the meantime, he wants to make a clean break with the England set-up,
giving new white-ball coach Matthew Mott and his successor as captain a free
hand.

But he could yet take up a future off-field role in cricket, with Morgan
already studying for a post-graduate diploma in strategic leadership.

"I don't spend a lot of time in the boardroom, so I don't know how that would
work, but I'm doing a course at the moment to allow me to sit on a board at
some stage," he said.