SYDNEY, May 30: Australia’s veteran Test opener Matthew Hayden insists the injury that has ended his tour of the West Indies will not end his career.
Hayden was sent home from the Caribbean after Australia discovered the tendinosis in his right Achilles, which kept him out of the first Test, would stop him from playing the remaining two games.
It will be the biggest break for Hayden in years, after he played 86 consecutive Tests until missing the WACA game against India in January with a hamstring problem.
However, Hayden, 36, rejected reports that the niggling injury might prompt him to start thinking of retirement.
“I’ll be back bigger and better than ever,” Hayden told the Sydney Morning Herald.
“This isn’t the kind of thing that is going to end my career. With the way the calendar is at the moment, there is a good opportunity now to get it right before a pretty busy schedule starts up.
“So we decided that, rather than push it, it would be better to just get it right once and for all and go from there. I am completely confident that I will get this right and be back soon.”
The team’s medical staff thought Hayden could probably have played in the One-day Internationals that will follow the Tests in the West Indies.
However, their cautious approach means he will aim the three home ODIs against Bangladesh starting in late August, ahead of the ICC Champions Trophy in Pakistan and a Test tour of India.
While Simon Katich is the top-order beneficiary for the remaining Tests in the Caribbean, Hayden’s absence from the ODI team means Australia will have an unfamiliar pairing regardless of who is chosen. They have not played an ODI since Adam Gilchrist retired at the end of the CB Series earlier this year.
Hayden’s replacement is yet to be named but of the men already in the one-day squad the most likely candidates to open are James Hopes, who filled in at the top twice in the tri-series at home, and the uncapped Shaun Marsh. Both have been in excellent form in the Indian Premier League.—Agencies































