Botham turns into ‘Sir Ian’
The 51-year-old former all-rounder, who can now be referred to as ‘Sir Ian’, was honoured for his services to sport and his charity work for leukemia research.
“I’ve had some great moments in the sport and other walks of life but nothing matches this,” Botham said. “It was mind blowing, magnificent.”
Botham, nicknamed ‘Beefy’, finished his career as England’s leading Test wicket-taker with 383 wickets and 5,200 Test runs. He played from 1974 until 1993 and said his greatest sporting achievements were the Ashes wins against Australia – 1981 and 1985 in England, and 1987 in Australia.
“The highlight has to be any time we beat Australia, particularly when we beat them in Australia,” Botham said. “But today puts that all into insignificance when you get an achievement like this.”
Since he retired, Botham has worked as a cricket commentator and raised millions of pounds for the Leukemia Research charity through a series of long-distance charity walks, which he began while still playing.
“It’s not just for myself but for my family and for the leukemia people who give their time to work for me,” Botham said of his award. “It’s just a very special day and one that I will never forget.”
Botham said he talked with the queen about his fundraising efforts, rather than cricket, during the ceremony at the Buckingham Palace.
“I explained the inroads we had made in terms of (leukemia) research. There used to be a 20 percent chance of survival, now it’s 80 percent.”—AP