It was forced due to an injury in the ongoing grand Ali and nagging shoulder, who played one Test and 14 ODIs for England, for retirement. Ali, 34, failed to recover from an injury sustained while playing for Lancashire last August.
He was released by the club - his third after the original Worcestershire at a later Hampshire time - in October, and had hoped to return to the game competitive cricket, but after failing to do so in spite of traveling abroad, taking on the call for retirement.
"I underwent major surgery and did all the rehab, but when I tried pot, and I struggled to get any speed," said Ali. "I've had a few serious injuries before and get back to them. I had the same positive mentality. It shattered me almost because, deep down, I knew something was not quite right in the shoulder.
"I went to Barbados hope hot conditions the process may help as a last resort. The doctors suggested that I need. More surgery and rehabilitation, which is a one-year process. On this basis, it would be unfair to pay myself to other countries."
Ali has a first-class career worthy in its favor. Playing 137 games from which he took 500 wickets at a rate of 27.46 and average strike of 46. In games in one day, he has 261 wickets of which 20 came to England between 2003 and 2006 and gave Ali his ODI debut against Zimbabwe in Leeds in the summer of 2006 and the last match it was in the same place later in exactly three years, against Sri Lanka. Was his solitary Test appearance against South Africa in August 2003, and by the way in Leeds again, where he took five wickets in a heavy defeat.
In ten seasons with the Worcester, he took 415 first-class wickets at 26.13 apiece, with 21 five-wicket seizures.
After leaving New Road in 2010, and signed with Ali Hampshire for two years during which he won the title of CB40 in 2012. He then played for Lancashire.
Tuesday, 12 May 2015
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