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Heather Knight Retires: England Captain Ends 16-Year Career After Lord’s Test

Heather Knight has announced her retirement from international cricket after the ongoing Lord’s Test against India, ending a 16-year career. She leaves as England women’s all-time appearance maker with 320 caps and 7,988 runs. Knight famously captained England to the 2017 ICC Women’s World Cup title at Lord’s. She is the first English player, male or female, to score an international century in all three formats.

Heather Knight to retire from international cricket after Lord's Test

London, July 12

World Cup-winning England captain Heather Knight has announced that she will retire from international cricket after the ongoing one-off Test match against India at Lord's, bringing curtains down on her 16-year career.

Knight made her England debut in 2010 and leaves the game as England women's all-time record appearance maker, with 320 caps (15 Tests, 160 ODIs and 145 T20Is) to her name, scoring 7,988 international runs, with six centuries. Her maiden IT20 ton, at Canberra in 2020, saw her become the first English player to score hundreds in all three formats of the game.

Knight captained the side on 199 occasions from 2016 to 2025, overseeing 134 victories - most famously at Lord's in 2017 as her team won the ICC Women's World Cup - before standing down in the wake of last winter's Ashes loss in Australia. She will join long-time teammate Tammy Beaumont in retirement.

"I'm extremely grateful and privileged to have gone on the journey that I have been on as an England cricketer. It's hard to walk away because the dressing room and the people in the dressing room have been a constant in my life for 16 years, and the memories and the experiences and the people have helped shape me become who I am today, but I'm really content with this decision, and I'm really excited for what's next," Knight said in a statement shared by ECB.

"Growing up as a little girl from Devon and playing with the boys, I never thought I'd get to experience this. It feels right to leave the game with this historic test at Lord's. It's been an amazing 16 years, and I feel so lucky," she added.

Including the title-winning campaign in 2017, Knight appeared in four ODI World Cups, finishing as their third-highest run-getter in both white-ball formats. In 2020, she became the first English player - male or female - to hit an international century in all three formats.

In December last year, Knight was appointed general manager of the London Spirit women's team, opting out of playing the 2026 edition of the Women's Hundred.

In the ongoing Test agianst India, Knight scored 6 in the first innings.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Rohit P

Sad to see her go, but what a career! 320 caps and centuries in all three formats - that's something special. As an Indian cricket lover, I'll always remember her classy handshake with Mithali Raj after that 2017 final. Pure sportsmanship. Future for English women's cricket looks bright with the talent coming through, but Heather's shoes will be hard to fill.

Vikram M

Honestly, I'm a bit surprised she's retiring mid-Test against India. She could have played a few more series. But I guess she knows her body and mind best. The ECB should have given her a proper farewell series though. Good luck with the London Spirit role, Heather! 🇮🇳🤝🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿

Kavya N

As someone who grew up watching women's cricket in India, I have to say Heather Knight was one of the pioneers who made the sport popular globally. Her battles with our Indian bowlers - Jhulan Goswami, Poonam Yadav - were always thrilling to watch. That 2020 T20I hundred against Thailand was pure class. Thank you for the memories, Heather! 🙌

Arjun K

A true great of the game! That final at Lord's in 2017 was a masterclass in leadership - she marshaled her resources brilliantly against a strong Indian side. Her stats speak for themselves: first English player to score international hundreds in all three formats. The women's game has lost a legend today. Good luck for your future endeavors, Heather Knight! ❤️🏏

S We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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