PACER and delicate Australian Brett Lee wants to return to the national team at Sri Lanka tours Down under this month for a Twenty20 and a three-match ODI series.
The 33-year-old paceman, who has suffered a number of injuries represented last year one-and-half, last his country in a one-dayer in India in October 2009.
"I will try and play a few of the one-daeng for the Blues in the next couple of weeks and then watch to try to play against Sri Lanka at the end of this month," Lee said.
Lee, however, is excluded from his return to test. "when I say that I do not want more as part of Test cricket, it is not because I do not like. This is the time of my life where I want a little change by body, by lifestyle, "Lee was quoted by the Australian Associated Press (AAP)."
"I loved every moment of Test cricket, but you have to draw a line in the sand somewhere, you are making me that return of (test), certainly do not see" Lee said.
The Australian career is plagued by problems of fitness, ranging from the side strain and surgery the elbow to broken thumb and a forearm injury.
But damage problems notwithstanding, Lee said he was not prepared to reduce the speed of his bowling.
"Certainly not, the way I always have, and the way I approach my cricket, it's that I always went flat out," Lee said.
"People told me ' how can stay with the surgery of the ankle and 12 operations later? '" I think my character, I see it as a challenge, "he added.
The 33-year-old paceman, who has suffered a number of injuries represented last year one-and-half, last his country in a one-dayer in India in October 2009.
"I will try and play a few of the one-daeng for the Blues in the next couple of weeks and then watch to try to play against Sri Lanka at the end of this month," Lee said.
Lee, however, is excluded from his return to test. "when I say that I do not want more as part of Test cricket, it is not because I do not like. This is the time of my life where I want a little change by body, by lifestyle, "Lee was quoted by the Australian Associated Press (AAP)."
"I loved every moment of Test cricket, but you have to draw a line in the sand somewhere, you are making me that return of (test), certainly do not see" Lee said.
The Australian career is plagued by problems of fitness, ranging from the side strain and surgery the elbow to broken thumb and a forearm injury.
But damage problems notwithstanding, Lee said he was not prepared to reduce the speed of his bowling.
"Certainly not, the way I always have, and the way I approach my cricket, it's that I always went flat out," Lee said.
"People told me ' how can stay with the surgery of the ankle and 12 operations later? '" I think my character, I see it as a challenge, "he added.
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