“One of the very best to play our game. An absolute privilege to take the field with you and I’m going to miss all the jokes from mid-off. Congratulations on an incredible career… you should be incredibly proud,” wrote team-mate Kate Cross.Sophie Ecclestone, England’s premier left-arm spinner, added: “One of the greatest of all time, thank you for everything you did for me and the game! Good luck on your new adventure”

While for Root the writing was on the wall after England’s 1-0 series loss in the Caribbean – if not before, in the aftermath of their Ashes drubbing – there were signs Shrubsole may be nearing the end of her international career last year. Sciver took over as England vice-captain when Shrubsole was sidelined for the tour of New Zealand in early 2021 with a knee injury, and was awarded the role permanently ahead of the home summer, beginning with the Test against India in Bristol.Shrubsole played in that match and all three ODIs against India, but her last T20I appearances remain against West Indies during their post-lockdown series in Derby in late 2020, when she took one wicket from four matches. She did not play either of the first two T20Is against New Zealand towards the end of last summer before winding up on crutches for the third at her home ground of Taunton, having sprained her ankle in training. She recovered in time to play the fourth and fifth ODIs against the White Ferns at the end of September.Shrubsole took one wicket in the drawn Ashes Test at the start of this year and two across the three ODIs in Australia before finishing with nine wickets from eight World Cup matches, where she had an average of 26.66 and an economy rate of 4.68.Related

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As England began their remarkable World Cup revival from three straight losses with victory over India – their first of five wins on the trot to reach the final – Shrubsole’s 2 for 20 made her the only England bowler to bag 100 wickets in both women’s ODIs and T20Is.Aside from her memorable performance in 2017, Shrubsole had many more. Her 5 for 17 against South Africa at the 2013 World Cup kept England’s tournament hopes alive, and her 3 for 11 against the same opponents at the 2018 T20 World Cup comprised a hat-trick, no less, to help propel England into the semi-finals. That was six years after she recorded her best T20I figures with 5 for 11 on England’s 2012 tour of New Zealand.In eight Test appearances, her best figures of 4 for 51 came during the 2014 Ashes, when she claimed seven wickets for the match, which England won by 61 runs.Her lethal inswingers troubled batters throughout, accounting for the dangerous Laura Wolvaardt and Lizelle Lee in England’s World Cup semi-final victory over South Africa last month.Still only 30 years old, Shrubsole will continue to play domestic cricket in the Rachael Heyhoe Flint Trophy, Charlotte Edwards Cup and the Hundred.And as thoughts return to last year’s sight of Shrubsole hobbling round the picturesque home of Somerset, the county she first represented at the age of 12, memories abound of admiring talk of her wonderful cricketing brain, an asset many in the game are keen to call on still. Clare Connor, ECB managing director of women’s cricket, made a point of saying upon Shrubsole’s retirement announcement: “…we look forward to retaining her expertise and passion as she embarks on her next chapter”.Watch this space.

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