Heather Knight retires after Lord's Test, ends 16-year England career
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
England women's captain Heather Knight announced on 12 July that she will retire from international cricket following the ongoing one-off Test against India at Lord's, closing the chapter on a 16-year career that made her the most-capped player in England women's history. The announcement was made via a statement shared by the England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB).
A Record-Breaking Career
Knight made her England debut in 2010 and retires with 320 caps — comprising 15 Tests, 160 ODIs, and 145 T20Is — the most appearances by any England women's cricketer. She accumulated 7,988 international runs, including six centuries. In 2020, at Canberra, she became the first English player — male or female — to score an international hundred in all three formats of the game, completing the set with her maiden IT20 century.
A Captain Who Defined an Era
Knight led England on 199 occasions between 2016 and 2025, overseeing 134 victories. Her most celebrated moment came at Lord's in 2017, when she lifted the ICC Women's World Cup — a title that remains the defining image of her captaincy. She appeared in four ODI World Cups in total, finishing as England's third-highest run-getter in both white-ball formats. She stepped down as captain following England's Ashes defeat in Australia last winter.
What Knight Said
'I'm extremely grateful and privileged to have gone on the journey that I have been on as an England cricketer. It's hard to walk away because the dressing room and the people in the dressing room have been a constant in my life for 16 years, and the memories and the experiences and the people have helped shape me become who I am today, but I'm really content with this decision, and I'm really excited for what's next,' Knight said in her ECB statement.
'Growing up as a little girl from Devon and playing with the boys, I never thought I'd get to experience this. It feels right to leave the game with this historic test at Lord's. It's been an amazing 16 years, and I feel so lucky,' she added.
Life After Cricket
Knight will not be stepping away from the game entirely. In December 2024, she was appointed General Manager of the London Spirit women's team, a role that led her to opt out of playing the 2026 Women's Hundred. She joins long-time teammate Tammy Beaumont, who is also retiring, in making the transition from player to the next phase of her career.
The Final Innings
In the ongoing Test against India at Lord's — the match that will serve as her farewell — Knight scored 6 in the first innings. The historic nature of the fixture at the Home of Cricket makes for a fitting, if bittersweet, send-off for one of the most consequential figures in the modern women's game.