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Atkinson and Smith get England Test nod

Surrey seamer Gus Atkinson and fellow newcomer Jamie Smith will make their Test debuts in England's series opener against the West Indies which starts on Wednesday morning.

Picture: AAP Image

The match at Lord's will mark the end of an era as record wicket-taker James Anderson bows out after 22 years in international cricket but it also represents the start of a fresh chapter for the side.

As the only wicketkeeper in the squad following the dropping of Jonny Bairstow and Ben Foakes, Smith's place at number seven was already confirmed but England gave themselves a variety of options to compliment the outgoing Anderson in the pace attack.

And they have given Atkinson the nod in front of Durham's Matthew Potts and the uncapped Nottinghamshire quick Dillon Pennington.

The 26-year-old has previously played nine ODIs and three T20s and was an unused squad member on the winter Test tour of India. Now he has the chance to stake his claim to form part of the group that takes the baton from Anderson and Stuart Broad, who retired at the end of England's previous Test on home soil last September.

Chris Woakes will make his first appearance in a year as the 35-year-old prepares to assume the mantle of attack leader in the second Test at Trent Bridge.

Shoaib Bashir, who edged his established Somerset team-mate Jack Leach out of the squad, will make a first home appearance having taken 17 wickets in three Tests in India.

Meanwhile, Anderson has admitted he has "made peace" with the end of his record-breaking career.

Anderson is preparing to lace up his bowling boots for the final time at Lord's, playing his 188th and final Test at the same ground that he made his debut in 2003.

The most prolific seamer in Test match history with 700 wickets, Anderson will begin his farewell appearance against the West Indies on Wednesday just a couple of weeks short of his 42nd birthday.

The decision was taken out of Anderson's hands – with head coach Brendon McCullum, captain Ben Stokes and director of cricket Rob Key making the call to move on with a view to the 2025/26 Ashes – and he is hoping to hold it together as he bows out.

Anderson has rarely let his emotions reach the surface during 22 years of stoic service and has no plans to start now.

"My emotions are a bit all over the place at the moment," he said.

"The big thing for me this week is wanting to play well, bowl well and get a win. I'm sure the emotions during the week will change but right now that's what I'm trying to focus on to stop myself crying.

"I'd just love to make a small contribution and win the game. That's the reason I've played cricket for so long, to experience those moments of winning series, winning games.

"I'd love to be able to sit down at the end of this Test match with a beer with all the lads having won the game."

Anderson carefully tip-toed around the elephant in the room as he took questions in the England and Wales Cricket Board's office space at Lord's, making it clear he harboured no intentions of retiring under his own steam and also making no criticism of the decision.

Having spent several years flat-batting questions about the likely date of his departure, he suspected a verdict had been reached when he received an unexpected summons from Stokes, McCullum and Key in April.

"I wouldn't say it was a surprise. When the three big dogs invited me to a hotel in Manchester for a chat I didn't think it was just a normal appraisal," he said.

"I had a suspicion that that was going to be the case and I think they were surprised at how calm I was when I reacted. I was probably surprised at my reaction. I wasn't overly emotional about it or angry about it or anything.

"I saw their point of view and appreciated them taking the time to lay it out for me, the reasoning and stuff like that. Since then I've come to terms with it and made peace with that decision. It's been a strange couple of months."

Anderson gave a timely reminder of what England would be missing as they began their next phase when he took seven for 35 for Lancashire against Nottinghamshire last week – recording the best figures of the entire County Championship season on his first appearance of the summer.

So, were England really right in their judgement that one last Ashes tour was a step too far?

"It's 18 months away, that's a long time but throughout my whole career I've never really focused on too far ahead. I've always tried to take it series by series and focus on those little goals," he said.

"I probably thought before the last away Ashes that I wouldn't make that one. Coming off the back of a seven-for, obviously I feel like I'm still bowling as well as I ever have.

"But I knew it had to end at some point, whether it's now, a year, two years. The fact that it's now is just something that I've got to deal with and accept. I'm excited to see what the future holds."

In the short term, he will transition seamlessly into a backroom role mentoring his successors in the squad but he has not yet ruled out turning out continuing his first-class career with Lancashire next season.

Even more immediately he is hoping to wrap up his Test career on a high, even though he does not expect to match the fairytale finish of Stuart Broad – who hit his final delivery for six then claimed a match-winning wicket with his last ball against Australia.

"It's a lot to live up to, that," said Anderson.

"I don't think I'll be doing anything like Broady did but I'd love to be able to contribute somehow this week, even if it's just one wicket."

 


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