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I'm
quitting, no regrets, says Andy Flower
BLOEMFONTEIN, South Africa, March 11 AFP
- Zimbabwe batsman Andy Flower says he will retire from international
cricket as soon as his team's World Cup campaign comes to an end. And
he insisted that he has no regrets about the black armband protest he
staged, along with teammate Henry Olonga, to register his anger at the
deteriorating conditions in his strife-torn country. "I have no
regrets about what I have done at this tournament," said the
34-year-old batsman. "The only thing I regret is getting run out
when I had made 37 in the last match against New Zealand." That
incident contributed to his team's six-wicket defeat which has meant
tonight's Super Six clash with Kenya at Goodyear Park here has become
a must-win situation if Zimbabwe are to have any hope of reaching the
semi-finals. Flower, who has come under intense pressure to abandon
his anti-Robert Mugabe protest, has been linked with South Australia.
But SA Cricket Association (SACA)
communications manager Jane Elliott said today no deal had been done
and refused to comment further on the possibility of Flower playing
for SA. "We can't talk about any possibilities until it's
actually done," Elliott told AAP. "As soon as we have any
contract news we will announce it." Flower has said he would once
again play for Essex in the English county championship later this
year Furthermore, he revealed that wife Rebecca, children,
Jamie, four, Sam, two and one-month-old Danielle had already left for
England. "I always find it strange when people say they have no
regrets about what they have done in the last 20 years," said
Flower. "I have made mistakes both on and off the field but I
have kept learning."
Flower, whose brother Grant also
plays in the Zimbabwe World Cup team, had been threatened with being
dropped from the squad if he did not give up on his protest which
bitterly attacked the Mugabe regime. He refused and his place was
secured when other senior players said they would not take the field
if their star batsman was axed. Olonga, who hasn't played since the
first match against Namibia, has already been sacked by his domestic
club for his part in the protest. Despite his anger with the
authorities in Zimbabwe, Flower is adamant that he hasn't given up
hope of his team making it to the semi-finals and is confident of wins
in the next two matches - against Kenya and against Sri Lanka in East
London on Saturday.
"We have been lucky to have got
as far as we have but we need to win the next two games," he
said. "We can make the semi-finals. We can beat Kenya and Sri
Lanka are not at the top of their game at the moment. "I don't
want to leave the World Cup just yet." |