704 wickets and out: England great Jimmy Anderson bows out of test cricket in win over West Indies
Jimmy Anderson, the most prolific fast bowler in test history, retired from international cricket after taking his 704th wicket as England defeated the West Indies by an innings and 114 runs at Lord's. The 41-year-old's final test saw him claim 3-...

The 41-year-old Anderson's 188th and last test ended with him taking 3-32 in the West Indies' second innings as they were dismissed for 136 a little over an hour into the third day's play.
One of those wickets came on Friday, with Anderson enticing an edge behind off Joshua Da Silva with a delivery that seamed away. It was classic Anderson - unlike the caught-and-bowled chance he dropped off Gudakesh Motie with England needing just one more wicket for victory.
He fell to his knees and covered his face with his hand.
Soon, he was walking off the field at the home of cricket to a standing ovation after Gus Atkinson took the final wicket.
Atkinson, who represents the future of English pace bowling, took two of the wickets after the Windies resumed on 79-6 - still 171 runs adrift of making England batting again - and had match figures of 12-106. He became the first England bowler to get a 10-wicket haul in a test at home since Alec Bedser in 1946.
Anderson finished his test career four wickets behind the late Australia legspinner Shane Warne's tally of 708 wickets. Only one bowler has more than them: former Sri Lanka spinner Muttiah Muralitharan with 800.
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