Shooting star to Supernova: Twenty years of James Anderson

England’s greatest celebrates two decades of back-breaking, shoulder-wrenching, ankle-stomping wear and tear

Andrew Miller22-May-2023Twenty years. It is a preposterous landmark for any international sportsman to achieve, let alone an international, all-time-great fast bowler.Twenty years of back-breaking, shoulder-wrenching, ankle-stomping wear and tear. Twenty years of rising, of falling, of plateauing, of being put out to pasture, and of being roped back in again. Twenty years of bettering one’s elders, then matching one’s peers, then disproving the doubters while beating back the younger, theoretically hungrier pretenders. And all the while, finding the inner fire to keep believing the struggle is, not just real, but worth it.At the age of 40 years and 296 days, James Anderson clearly still believes. Assuming his groin niggle is nothing more than that, he’s already inked in for his tenth Ashes campaign this summer – and a realistic shot at 700 Test wickets – even if he may have to wait until Ireland have been and gone before he’s unleashed for a record 28th Test appearance at Lord’s.Related

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But temporally speaking, he’s already entering his third decade as an England cricketer. On May 22, 2003, he was picked for the first of those Lord’s Tests – and the first of his 179 all told – alongside Yorkshire’s Anthony McGrath (whose own four-match career would be done and dusted before that summer was). And on the third day of that match, with first-innings figures of 5 for 73, the first of Anderson’s seven appearances on the dressing-room honours boards duly came to pass.At that precise moment, it felt as though Anderson’s England career was panning out like a prophecy. For extraordinary though it is to relate, given how many career evolutions he has since undergone, he arrived at that Test debut, two months shy of his 21st birthday, with a fully-formed narrative arc that could quite easily have defined and destroyed a lesser player.The story had begun six months earlier, at the mid-point of a bruising Ashes tour in December 2002, when England’s golden child was plucked from Burnley in the Lancashire League and unleashed in the one-day leg of the tour, to face down an Australia ODI team at the absolute zenith of its power.