Michael Clarke's retirement decision overshadowed the eve of the Cricket World Cup final, with the Australian captain using a pre-match news conference to reveal tomorrow's tournament decider against New Zealand would be his last one-day international.
Clarke, who turns 34 next week, said he told his teammates of his retirement about 10 minutes before announcing it to a packed news conference on Saturday at the Melbourne Cricket Ground.
He said wanted to give his successor a full four-year cycle to prepare a team for the 2019 World Cup, and hoped that a break from the shorter format would allow him to continue playing test cricket for longer. "I was very fortunate four years ago to get the opportunity to captain this one-day team (and) that was really good preparation for me leading up to this World Cup," he said.
"The next Australian captain deserves the same opportunity. I don't think it's realistic that I'll be fit and healthy for the next World Cup, so I believe it's the right time."
Clarke has had a chronic back problem throughout his career and has recently struggled with hamstring strains, requiring surgery late last year that kept him out of action for more than two months between the finish of the first test against India and Australia's second match at the World Cup.Steve Smith, the 25-year-old batsman who deputized as test captain in Clarke's absence against India, is a contender to take over the ODI captaincy.