Petersen retires after series win

Nine minutes before the scheduled break for lunch yesterday, Hashim Amla leaned back to crack one of Marlon Samuels's flaccid offerings through an increasingly porous cover field to end the Test series.

With the sun-splashed picture postcard of Newlands forming a fine backdrop, SA beat West Indies by eight wickets to claim the series 2-0.

Minutes later, Amla accepted a cheque for $500000 from International Cricket Council chief executive Dave Richardson - SA's prize for cementing their number one ranking.

All good? Not quite. The last question put to Amla at his press conference was whether he had had any indication from Alviro Petersen about the struggling opener's future.

"I think we'll hear about that a bit later," Amla said. Then the entire SA squad filed in and stood at the back of the room.

Except, that is, for Petersen, who took a seat at the top table to say: "I feel that at 34 it's time for me to retire from international cricket and for me to move on with my career."

Petersen would remain on Cricket SA's books until April 1, when his contract expires. He plans to continue playing franchise and county cricket.

Petersen did not score a century in his last 25 completed Test innings. But in only 12 of them did he face fewer than 40 balls.

"It was frustrating," Petersen said. "I feel I'm playing good cricket but the runs haven't come."

Almost four years ago, Petersen became one of then only four South Africans to have scored a century on Test debut, and that in the cauldron of Eden Gardens in Kolkata.

With cruel symmetry, his career ended at the other end of that scale with what became the last ball of Monday's play, which Petersen chopped onto his stumps. His score? Nought.

There is even crueler symmetry in the fact that number five in SA's century-on-debut club is Stiaan van Zyl, who has said he will open the batting for the Cobras for the rest of the first-class season.

Van Zyl is also expected to open for SA A in their four-day series against the England Lions, which starts in Paarl on January 11.

Was Van Zyl the frontrunner to replace Petersen?

"Six months is a long time in Test cricket," SA coach Russell Domingo said with reference to the fact that SA's next series in the format is in Bangladesh in July.

"We need to think long and clearly."