Career Records and Achievements of James Anderson
James Anderson career records and achievements: 704 Test wickets, international totals, longevity stats and why his legacy still matters in 2025. Read on Batery.
Why James Anderson still matters now
Why James Anderson still matters now
Sir James Michael “Jimmy” Anderson finished international cricket in July 2024 after his 188th Test at Lord’s with a final tally of 704 Test wickets, the most by any fast bowler and third overall. He moved straight into England’s setup as fast-bowling mentor, kept playing for Lancashire across red and white ball, and returned to franchise action in The Hundred in 2025. That combination of longevity, skill and relevance explains why his legacy is active rather than archived.

The record book, context and what changed in 2025
The record book, context and what changed in 2025
Overview and landmark numbers
Overview and landmark numbers
Anderson represented England from 2002 to 2024 across all formats and retired from internationals after the first West Indies Test at Lord’s in July 2024. He signed off with 704 Test wickets in 188 matches, behind only Muttiah Muralitharan and Shane Warne. His ODI haul stands at 269, an England record, and his T20I ledger lists 18 wickets from 19 games. Add them together and you get 991 international wickets, which places him third in men’s internationals. He bowled more than forty thousand deliveries in Tests alone, an endurance marker unprecedented for a fast bowler.
Anderson’s method never depended on raw pace. He built dismissals with seam presentation, release control and the ability to move the ball late. That is why the numbers aged so well. He could operate at two-seamers-and-a-spinner Old Trafford, at swing-friendly Trent Bridge, and on flatter away surfaces once he committed to maintaining speed through the crease rather than chasing top-end velocity. The durability stat that frames it best is the total balls bowled in Tests. Crossing the forty-thousand mark is a combination of fitness, action efficiency and selection consistency that no other quick has matched.

2024 retirement and immediate transition
2024 retirement and immediate transition
The retirement arc was orderly. The ECB announced in May 2024 that Anderson would bow out after Lord’s. He did, taking four in the match and closing on 704. Within days he agreed to remain with the Test group as fast-bowling mentor for the rest of the summer, an arrangement that continued into 2025. The move kept institutional knowledge inside the dressing room while freeing up selection for a younger pace core.
Lancashire and a white-ball comeback of 2025
Lancashire and a white-ball comeback of 2025
For 2025 he signed a one-year Lancashire deal that covered County Championship and Vitality Blast. On June 1 he played his first T20 since 2014 and took three for seventeen against Durham, a career-best T20 return that set the tone for a productive Blast season. In red ball he captained at times and remained a control bowler who could open up an end for spinners. Late in July he featured in the Gloucestershire fixture at Cheltenham as Lancashire pushed their promotion case.

In mid-July he was picked as a Manchester Originals wildcard ahead of the 2025 Hundred, marking a return to limited-overs franchise cricket after more than a decade away from that scene. The selection reflected both current form and the value of his new-ball overs in short formats.
Honours and legacy milestones
Honours and legacy milestones
Anderson was appointed OBE in 2015 and received a knighthood in 2025, formally invested at Windsor in October. The honour capped a year in which he moved from Test spearhead to national mentor while still performing for Lancashire. In June 2025, the ECB and BCCI also re-framed the England-India Test prize as the Anderson-Tendulkar Trophy, a nod to his longevity and to the rivalry that threaded through his career.
Head-to-head markers that define an era
Head-to-head markers that define an era
Rivalries tell you as much as aggregates. Anderson dismissed Sachin Tendulkar nine times in Tests, a stat that followed the series-within-a-series narrative between the two. Against Virat Kohli, he took the wicket seven times in Tests across a duel that stretched from 2012 to 2024. Those numbers helped anchor three decades of England-India contests that shaped his public image as a master of late swing against the very best.

Quick-use fact pack for experts, editors and broadcasters
Quick-use fact pack for experts, editors and broadcasters
Below are ready-to-drop bullets. They come after the context on purpose.
- Retirement and tally
Anderson retired after Lord’s Test vs West Indies in July 2024 and finished with 704 Test wickets in 188 matches, most by a fast bowler and third all time.
- International split and total
ODIs 269 wickets, T20Is 18 wickets, international total 991. England men’s ODI record holder.
- Volume and durability
Bowled 40,037 Test deliveries, the most by a pace bowler in the format.
- 2025 activity
Fast-bowling mentor with England, Lancashire contract across formats, T20 Blast comeback with three for seventeen on return, and Manchester Originals wildcard for The Hundred.
- 2025 honours and rivalry nod
Knighted in April 2025 and series prize with India retitled the Anderson-Tendulkar Trophy.


