He’s seen many last games and heard every cliché about his age, but at 46 the former Kent allrounder isn’t ready to hang up his boots yet

Valkerie Baynes28-Sep-2022Darren Stevens has been asked this question a lot: why?He will celebrate his 47th birthday just as the 2023 county season is starting – playing for who knows what team after Kent cut him adrift at the end of 18 years of service. Why on earth would he want to play on?Crucially, Stevens asks himself: why not?”I’ve still got the bit between my teeth,” he says. “I still love the challenges. It comes down to desire, desire to keep competing and keep challenging myself each year.”The game is moving quickly. Look at Test cricket now: we’ve gone from scoring at three an over to the boys looking at trying to go at five an over. The game’s moving so quickly, white-ball and red-ball, and the key is sticking with that and trying to keep up with the times.Related

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Stevens says he has lots of friends from over the years of playing and playing abroad, a number of whom played international cricket and when they finished at that level, came back to county cricket to play for a year or two before suddenly fading out. “I’ve spoken to them about it,” he says.One such conversation was with Jacques Rudolph, the former South Africa international, who called time on his career at the end of a four-year stint with Glamorgan in 2017, aged 36. Surprised that Stevens, five years his senior, wasn’t joining him in retirement, Rudolph said, “I don’t know how you do it.” Again, Stevens flipped the perspective: “I said, ‘Well how are you doing it?'” Rudolph told him that he’d lost the desire and struggled to get up for games.”For me, this is the highest level I’ve ever played at,” Stevens says. “I’ve played a lot of England A and I’ve been on a few England A tours and Academy tours. I’d say that’s probably on par with first-class cricket. But I’ve never played international cricket. This is disappointing for me, but it never happened.