England’s World Cup-winning captain Eoin Morgan has retired from international cricket with immediate effect, the England and Wales Cricket Board announced Tuesday.
Morgan led England to victory at the 2019 World Cup – their first major global 50-overs title in men’s international cricket – and took them to the top of the one-day and Twenty20 rankings.
Morgan, who started his international career with Ireland for whom he played 23 ODIs from 2006 to 2009, will be regarded as one of the all-time great English cricketers for his contribution with the bat and his leadership qualities.
Here’s the statement issued by Morgan:
“After careful deliberation and consideration, I am here to announce my retirement from international cricket with immediate effect.
“To call time on what has been without doubt the most enjoyable and rewarding chapter of my career hasn’t been an easy decision, but I believe now is the right time to do so, both for me, personally, and for both England white-ball sides I have led to this point.
“From my start in the international arena with Ireland to winning the World Cup in 2019, I have never lost sight of how integral family support is to any international sportsperson. To my Mum and Dad, my wife, Tara, and our family around the world, thank you for your unconditional support throughout the good and more challenging times in my career. Without you all, this incredible journey would not have been possible.
“I must also thank my teammates, coaches, supporters, and those behind the scenes who have made my career and any successes possible. I am hugely proud of what I have achieved as a player and captain, but the things I will cherish and remember the most are the memories I made with some of the greatest people I know along the way.
“I have been lucky enough to play in two World Cup winning teams, but I believe the future for England’s white-ball teams is brighter than ever. We have more experience, more strength and more depth than ever before. I look forward to watching on with a huge level of excitement.
“To what lies ahead for me, I will continue to enjoy playing at a domestic level while I can. I’m really looking forward to playing and captaining London Spirit in the second edition of The Hundred this year.”
— via ECB
Record-breaker 📊
— England Cricket (@englandcricket) June 28, 2022
History maker 📝
Our greatest ever 🏏#ThankYouMorgs ❤️ pic.twitter.com/jvvWprBSDK
The 35-year-old Dublin-born batter has been struggling with form and fitness issues this year. He was twice out for nought during the recent ODI series away to the Netherlands in Amstelveen and withdrew from the third match with a groin issue.
Morgan is England’s leading run-scorer of all time in ODI and T20 cricket with 6,957 and 2,458 runs respectively. His tally of 225 ODIs and 115 T20Is is also an England record. But he had made just two fifties from his past 28 international innings across the two white-ball formats.
Prior to the Netherlands series he confessed to feeling his age and struggling to recover physically form matches, telling Sky Sports: “If I don’t think I am good enough or I don’t feel I am contributing to the team, then I will finish.”
Morgan switched allegiance from his native Ireland in 2009, having forged an English county career with Middlesex.
He was a pioneer in becoming an England white-ball specialist after calling time on a 16-Test career featuring two hundreds that ended in 2012 to concentrate on the shorter formats.
A dynamic middle-order batter, Morgan was also a trailblazer in the English game with his then unusual ability to hit the ball to all parts of the ground.
He succeeded Alastair Cook as England’s ODI captain on the eve of the 2015 World Cup in Australia, where the team suffered a humiliating first-round exit.
Despite that reverse, Morgan remained in post and together with former England head coach Trevor Bayliss oversaw the side’s transformation into a major force in limited-overs cricket.
Here’s a look at the reactions from the cricket fraternity following the retirement of the former English captain:
You’ve changed English cricket forever.
— England Cricket (@englandcricket) June 28, 2022
An innovator 🏏 A motivator 💪 A champion 🏆
Your legacy will live on...#ThankYouMorgs ❤️ pic.twitter.com/a32SSvCDXI
Morgan retiring now—with a T20 & ODI World Cup in the next 18 months—is fitting. It’s a selfless move that puts team before player which was the spirit of his leadership. It’s testament to the revolution he led that he no longer feels he is worth his spot in the team.
— Freddie Wilde (@fwildecricket) June 28, 2022
Eoin Morgan's achievement with England: not just winning, but changing the entire image of the side in the process, in some ways similar to Arsene Wenger at Arsenal.
— Tim Wigmore (@timwig) June 28, 2022
Very few more significant England cricketers in the last 50 years
Until 2015, England never had a player captaining 2 full editions of Men's ODI World Cups.
— Kausthub Gudipati (@kaustats) June 28, 2022
Eoin Morgan becomes the first to do it, despite leading England to their worst performance in 2015. But then leads England to their first trophy in 2019.
Eoin Morgan for England:
— The Cricketer (@TheCricketerMag) June 28, 2022
⏤ Most ODI appearances
⏤ Most ODI runs
⏤ Most ODI sixes
⏤ Most T20I appearances
⏤ Most T20I runs
⏤ Most T20I sixes#ThankYouMorgs pic.twitter.com/CY6oGZzGUl
Appreciate Eoin Morgan for several things, but most of all for walking away at the perfect time from something he built. It's probably the hardest thing to do.#EoinMorgan #CricketTwitter
— Rohit Sankar (@imRohit_SN) June 28, 2022
We are so lucky to have @Eoin16 play for and captain England. Your mentality changed our game and gave us belief to be the best/take the sport to another level. Incredible leadership that so many people could learn from. Thanks for everything 🙏🙏🙏
— Isa Guha (@isaguha) June 27, 2022
If anything, what the recent happenings in England cricket have told us, is you need more characters like Morgan who are publically embracing different cultures & practicing inclusivity.
— Gurkirat Singh Gill (@gurkiratsgill) June 28, 2022
Eoin Morgan appreciation tweet.
— Chris Addison💙 (@mrchrisaddison) June 28, 2022
We've been very luck to have him. What a captain.
it's sort of a shame that he doesn't get a farewell game but I guess that's also fitting of him, no fanfare, not wasting one more game that could go to another player, just a simple goodbye.
— Kieran (@BerbaSpinCric) June 28, 2022
Lovely tribute this, to one of the most focussed, driven, plain-speaking & best people it’s been my pleasure to work with over the 32 years I’ve been involved in cricket. I first met him at the U19 CWC in 2006; I hope he stays involved as the sport needs people like him… https://t.co/ab3YRW2rFY
— Brian Murgatroyd (@murgersb) June 28, 2022
Great captain, enjoyed listening to him speak, but also made six-hitting look easy when he was on song. Go well, Eoin Morgan. pic.twitter.com/KK2QEmYKy4
— Vinayakk (@vinayakkm) June 28, 2022
Eoin Morgan changed English cricket and made the national team world champions.
— Nick Timothy (@NJ_Timothy) June 28, 2022
That other players eventually overtook him in the style of cricket he pioneered is probably the most fitting tribute to his captaincy. https://t.co/X5enqsLDKz
Cricket is about five centuries old in England.
— Abhishek Mukherjee (@ovshake42) June 28, 2022
When a cricket historian of the future chronicles all that into a fat book, they will devote a chapter to Eoin Morgan the white-ball captain.
Eoin Morgan calls it a day. His form as a batter just wasn't good enough to go on in the end. But what an impact he has had on the ODI game.
— Ashish Magotra (@clutchplay) June 28, 2022
Few players leave the game having had a truly transformational impact: Eoin Morgan was one who did.
— Andrew McGlashan (@andymcg_cricket) June 28, 2022
I worked with Eoin Morgan many times during the 2019 World Cup.
— Rupin Kale (@Vegansportlover) June 28, 2022
He was professional, efficient and respectful every time.
What he did with England is nothing short of revolutionary - incredible leader & an exciting batter.
Nothing but absolute respect for him 🙌
With AFP inputs