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Veteran Australian cricketer Usman Khawaja has announced his retirement from international cricket.
“God, through cricket, has given me far more than I ever imagined,” he told reporters at a press conference at the Sydney Cricket Ground (SCG) on Friday morning.
“He’s given me memories I’ll carry forever, friendships that go well beyond the game, and lessons that shaped me, who I am off the field.”
Khawaja said the fifth Ashes Test of the series at the SCG — where he made his debut in 2011 — will be his last.

After months of speculation surrounding his career, the cricketer has officially announced his retirement. His ability to participate in recent matches was hindered due to recurring back spasms, which ruled him out of the first Ashes Test in Perth last November and kept him from playing in the Brisbane Test the following month.

Usman Khawaja sits smiling behind several microphones at a press conference, wearing an Australian cricket team hoodie against a backdrop featuring Cricket Australia and NRMA Insurance logos.

In a press conference where he confirmed his retirement, Usman Khawaja expressed feelings of being held to different standards after he had voiced his opinions on political matters in recent years.

Usman Khawaja, appearing at the press conference in an Australian cricket team hoodie, shared his thoughts with the media against a backdrop adorned with Cricket Australia and NRMA Insurance logos.

At 39, Khawaja is set to become Australia’s oldest Test player in four decades when he takes the field at the Sydney Cricket Ground this Sunday.

On-field accomplishments aside, Khawaja has been widely regarded as a trailblazer in Australian sport.
The first Muslim to play Test cricket for Australia, he’s been a prominent advocate for inclusion and representation, speaking openly about faith, racism and belonging at the elite level.
He used Friday’s announcement as a chance to highlight issues that still exist within the game, beginning with coverage of his back spasms this year.
Khawaja was heavily criticised in some quarters for playing golf in the lead up to the Perth Test, before the spasms forced him from the field and then ruled him out of Brisbane.
“I could have copped it for two days, but I copped it for five days straight,” Khawaja said.
“It wasn’t even about my performances, it was about something very personal. It was about my preparation.
“The way that everyone came at me about my preparation was quite personal in terms of things like ‘he’s not committed to the team, he was only worried about himself, he played this golf comp the day before, he’s selfish, he doesn’t train hard enough, he’s lazy’.

“These are the same racial stereotypes that I’ve grown up with my whole life.”

Khawaja said the comments from former players and those in the media were at odds with the way other injuries were spoken about.
“I can give you countless number of guys who have played golf the day before a match and have been injured, but you guys haven’t said a thing.
“I can give you even more examples of guys who have had 15 schooners the night before a game and have then been injured, but no-one said a word because they were just being Aussie larrikins, they were just being lads.
“But when I get injured, everyone went at my credibility and who I am as a person.

Khawaja believed part of that commentary came down to the fact he had been outspoken on political issues in recent years, and the most notably the plight of Palestinians.

“I kind of know why I get nailed a lot of the time, particularly over the last two years,” he said.
“I understand that I’ve talked about certain issues outside cricket which leaves me exposed and a lot of people don’t like that.
“I still find it hard when I say that everyone deserves freedom and that Palestinians deserve freedom and equal rights, and why that’s a big issue.
“But I get it because I put myself out there.
“Even when we get to Australian politics and we get all these right-wing politicians that are anti-immigration and (fuel) Islamophobia and I speak up against them, I know that people don’t love that.

“But I feel like I have to because where these guys are trying to divide and create hate and trying to create animosity in the Australian community, I’m doing the exact opposite.”

SCG fitting location for Khawaja’s farewell

His decision to walk away also means the Sydney Test will also turn into something of a farewell party, with the series decided and Australia 3-1 up.
Sydney will be a fitting location for his final Test, given so much of his career has been based around the city he moved to as a four-year-old from Islamabad, Pakistan.

His 2011 debut against England, in which he scored 37 runs, offered Australian fans hope at the end of the worst home summer this century.

Australian cricketer Usman Khawaja sits on the grass of the Sydney Cricket Ground with his wife and two young daughters.

Usman Khawaja with his wife Rachel and children Aisha and Ayla at the Sydney Cricket Ground, where Khawaja will soon play his final Test match. Source: AAP / Dan Himbrechts

And it was at the SCG where he revived his career as a 35-year-old, scoring twin centuries against England when Travis Head missed a Test in 2022 during the COVID-19 pandemic.

That Test prompted one of the great late-career revivals, hitting seven centuries in his first two years back in the side as part of a dominant opening partnership with childhood friend David Warner.
— With additional reporting from the Australian Associated Press.

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