Injury prone paceman Brett Lee is working hard to get back on the field and views next year's limited overs World Cup as potentially perfect for his international swansong. Lee, 33, has had his career stalled several times in recent years by an assortment of injuries to his foot, ankle, side and thumb. Read More

Picking Brett Lee for the World Twenty20 was a gamble that didn't pay off and now chief selector Andrew Hilditch is demanding Lee produce career-best form if he wants to play for Australia again. Read More

Brett Lee will miss the World Twenty20 competition in the West Indies after being injured in Australia's shock one-run warm-up defeat by Zimbabwe. Read More

Brett Lee is thinking "outside the square" to ensure next month's World Twenty20 tournament isn't his last hurrah in Australian colours. The injury-plagued speedster Brett Lee is fit to return to international action in the Caribbean but knows he must be craftier to stay there. Read More

BRETT LEE'S management has indicated the fast bowler might be better off putting his international comeback on ice than appearing at less than his best for the upcoming World Twenty20 championships. Read More

BRETT Lee's difficult comeback has encountered yet another hurdle, with the veteran fast bowler struggling to be fit for Australia's World Twenty20 campaign because of a broken right thumb. Read More

So, itโ€™s goodnight Brett Lee, and Test cricket loses one of itโ€™s few genuine box-office bowlers. His Test career was an odd one. He finishes as Australiaโ€™s fourth highest wicket-taker with 310 wickets in 76 Tests โ€“ more than Benaud, Lindwall, Thomson, Hughes and Miller. Yet for the English, Lee will be remembered primarily for his pace, and as an inconsistent nearly man, despite opening the b Read More

A DISCUSSION with Andrew Flintoff has persuaded Brett Lee to retire from Test cricket, effective immediately. The Australian fast bowler, fourth on the all-time list of Australian wicket-takers, will announce this week his decision not to attempt a comeback from another serious injury. Read More

Australia bowler Brett Lee has admitted he may never play top-level cricket again because of serious injury. The 33-year-old is recovering from elbow surgery he had in December 2009 and has been ruled out of the whole summer season in Australia. Read More
Australian cricketer Brett Lee has condemned the spate of recent attacks on Indian nationals in Victoria, but insists Australia is a safe place for Indians to visit. Lee, who enjoys a high profile in India not only because of his cricket but Bollywood movie and musical forays, said he was saddened by recent violence against Indians. Read More