Tammy Beaumont will retire from international cricket following the conclusion of England's historic Test match against India at Lord's.
A true England legend, the Kent-born batter has represented her country for almost 17 years, earning countless accolades and breaking a multitude of records in the process.
In 2017, she was an integral part of the England squad that lifted the ODI World Cup, finishing as the leading run-getter and scooping the Player of the Tournament award.
We take a look at her distinguished international career...
Considering Beaumont began her England career keeping wicket and batting at 10, the next 16 years have been quite the journey.
Prior to her 261st and final appearance for her country, the 35-year-old will have made 7,325 runs across all three formats. Broken down across the trio of disciplines, Beaumont has amassed 612 runs, in Tests, 4,738 in ODIs and 1,975 in T20Is.
Despite One-Day cricket standing out as her most prolific format, Beaumont became the first English woman to score a Test double-ton with her 208 against Australia in the 2023 Women's Ashes Test at Trent Bridge.
That accomplishment makes her just the second English woman, and fifth English player, to score a double-hundred in all three formats of the game.
But, as previously mentioned, ODIs is the format for which she will be remembered the fondest.
She calls time on her career having scored the ninth-most runs of any woman in ODI history, getting her 4,378 at an average of 40.49.
She scored 24 half-centuries in 50-over cricket, converting half of them into three-figure scores, giving her 12 in total - more than any English woman in the history of the game.
Format | Matches | Innings | High Score | Average | 100s | 50s |
WTests | 11 | 18 | 208 | 34.00 | 1 | 2 |
WODIs | 140 | 130 | 168* | 40.49 | 12 | 24 |
WT20Is | 109 | 93 | 116 | 24.08 | 1 | 11 |
*Statistics correct as of 09/07/2026