I lost the hunger to play more cricket: Mitchell Johnson

18 November,2015 08:44 AM IST |   |  PA Sport

Australian pacer Mitchell Johnson says lack of desire to enjoy cricket on tough days prompted him to retire from international formats of the game

Mitchell Johnson kisses wife Jessica after bidding adieu to international cricket in Perth yesterday while his daughter Rubika looks on


Perth: Moments after leaving the field for the final time, Mitchell Johnson looked back on his storied international career and declared: "I feel like I've done enough".

Also Read: Johnson had all the required traits of a fast bowler: Jeff Thomson


Sealed with a kiss: Mitchell Johnson kisses wife Jessica after bidding adieu to international cricket in Perth yesterday while his daughter Rubika looks on. Pic/Getty Images

The 34-year-old fast bowler announced his retirement on Day Five of the drawn second Test against New Zealand and bowed out with two wickets, taking his tally to 313 - fourth on Australia's all-time list behind Shane Warne, Glenn McGrath and Dennis Lillee.

Also Read: Johnson taught me to work hard on fitness: Aditya Tare

He also lies third among left-arm seamers to have played the game, trailing only Wasim Akram and Chaminda Vaas. His last two victims, Tom Latham and Martin Guptill, succumbed to the kind of short, rising deliveries that became Johnson's primary weapon but he admitted at close of play that he had started to lose the predatory edge that made him such a fierce competitor.

And it was that which persuaded him to bring the curtain down after 73 Tests, 153 one-day internationals and 30 T20s for his country.

Also Read: Cricket fraternity pays tribute to retiring Mitchell Johnson

"I feel like I've done enough out there," he told ABC after being chaired from the pitch in Perth by his teammates.

‘I gave it my all'

"I gave it my all. That's all I've ever done in my career... I'm quite proud of it.

"I've been thinking about it for probably a year. It has been up and down for me.

"I think to be honest I felt it a little bit in (the first Test at) Brisbane and a little bit in England (this summer).

"Those tougher days are normally the ones I've loved and they really challenged me but I just didn't enjoy it.

"Here at the WACA I felt the same thing, I just didn't enjoy the challenge of those tough days. I just lost the hunger. I thought it was time."

Johnson, who has been mocked and feared at various stages of his vascilating story, was happy with the timing of his decision but admits that would not have been the case had his time come a couple of years earlier.

Also Read: Johnson is special, enjoyed his aggressive approach: Tendulkar

A broken toe in 2011 threatened to be the end of his time at the elite level, and he was even left out of the 2013 Ashes tour to England - opponents against whom he had endured his darkest days.

But he roared back with a career-defining return series that winter, taking 37 wickets at 13.97 in a 5-0 whitewash before taking similar form to South Africa.

Big World Cup win
In March this year he played a key role in Australia's World Cup win, the final major instalment on his CV.

"I had hit a pretty low period in my career... if I'd just walked away I'd have had regrets," he said.

"Coming back from that was probably one of the best moments of my career, proving to a lot of people, including myself, I had that inner strength.

"I was able to enjoy an Ashes series win in Australia, probably one of the happiest moments of my career. I'm really glad I did that," he added.

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