England wicketkeeper-batsman Craig Kieswetter on Friday announced his premature retirement from professional cricket following the serious eye injury he suffered last season
London: England and Somerset wicketkeeper-batsman Craig Kieswetter has been forced to retire due to an eye injury, he announced today.
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The 27-year-old South Africa-born player was left with vision problems after breaking his nose and damaging his cheekbone while batting in a County Championship match against Northamptonshire in July last year. Kieswetter was struck in the face by a short ball from Northamptonshire all-rounder David Willey during a domestic match last summer and required surgery on a fractured eye socket.
Craig Kieswetter
According to the England Cricket Board (ECB) website, the 27-year-old said he had made the decision after being given time away from the game, adding that mentally he will never again be the player that he was.
"Having gone through that experience of my eye injury and everything it entailed, I feel mentally I will never again be the player that I was," Kieswetter said in a statement on the Somerset website.
"I have had a terrific career, with plenty of ups and occasional downs, and I am calling time on my career and walking away with no regrets."
Kieswetter played in 46 one-day internationals and 25 Twenty20 internationals for England, but was never capped at Test level.
In first-class cricket and list 'A' cricket, he averaged just under 40 with the bat, while his average in Twenty20 was just under 32. Behind the stumps he claimed 308 catches and 11 stumpings.
He scored 497 runs in the domestic T20 Blast in 2014 and 419 runs in the County Championship prior to suffering his
injury at Wantage Road, when a bouncer went through his helmet grill and struck him in the face.
"This is sad news for all concerned," said Somerset director of cricket Matt Maynard.
"At his best, Craig was one of -- if not the -- most explosive 'keeper-batsmen' in the game. He is an extremely gifted cricketer, who could win a game on his own.
"His record speaks for itself and the game will miss him. I would have loved to have worked with him this year, but it
just wasn't to be."
Kieswetter, who has a Scottish mother, made his Somerset debut in 2007.
He played his first game for England in 2010 and starred in their victory over Australia in that year's Twenty20 World Cup final in the West Indies, scoring 63 runs and being named man of the match.
"I'll have so many memories of a career that spanned nine years of my life during which I have made so many friends," Kieswetter added. "See you all on the sidelines."