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Anderson has no plans of retiring from cricket

Barely 20 minutes after James Anderson had scripted history becoming the highest wicket-taker among fast bowlers, which also ended the fourth Test with England winning it by 118 runs; he had given another moment for the cricketing world to cherish. The holder of 564 Test wickets almost broke down while describing his feelings for one of his best mates Alastair Cook, who was playing his last Test match.

Barely 20 minutes after James Anderson had scripted history becoming the highest wicket-taker among fast bowlers, which also ended the fourth Test with England winning it by 118 runs; he had given another moment for the cricketing world to cherish. The holder of 564 Test wickets almost broke down while describing his feelings for one of his best mates Alastair Cook, who was playing his last Test match.

The inevitable question was is Anderson next? The answer was an emphatic no. Anderson says he has no plans to hang up his boots yet after overtaking Glenn McGrath.

The Lancashire swing bowler, with 564 scalps, now trails just the spin trio of Sri Lanka's Muttiah Muralitharan (800 wickets), Australia's Shane Warne (708) and India's Anil Kumble (619) in the all-time list.

The 36-year-old downplayed his personal achievement, saying he was more focused on helping England win the final match of the series.

"When I sit down at the end of my career, when I finish, it will mean a hell of a lot to me to be able to see what I've achieved," he said.

"But right now it's hard when you put all your energy into the present and trying to perform well for England. That's all I really focus on."

Anderson is three years older than his great friend Alastair Cook, who retired from Test cricket after the match at the Oval but has no immediate plans to quit.

When asked how long he would go on, Anderson, who no longer plays one-day cricket for England, said: "I don't really think about it. I think I play my best when I focus on what's ahead of me, the next game, the next series, whatever it is."

"I read something that Glenn McGrath said," he added. "He went into the 2006 Ashes with no intention of retiring and then by the end of it he thought his time was up. That could happen to me. Who knows? I don't like looking too far ahead."

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