The countdown will start for Jayawardene when he takes the field tomorrow at Christchurch in the World Cup match between Sri Lanka and New Zealand.
"After 18 years, I will of course miss playing for the national side. However, I was always prepared for it and had taken decision (to retire) well in advance. So I have had time to adjust to it. Another reason was that I wanted youngsters to get their share of opportunities," Jayawardene, who will bid adieu to international cricket after the World Cup, told PTI in an exclusive interview.
"Sri Lanka has plenty of talented young cricketers and I am sure they will rise up and leave their own mark," said Jayawardene, who has more than 25,000 international runs (25,832) across three formats.
Despite being one among the contemporary greats of the game, it is humility with which Jayawardene assessed his career.
"I have been very fortunate to have had a relatively successful career," said the batsman, who has scored a staggering 11,814 runs in Tests, 12,525 runs in ODI, including 53 international hundreds.
Jayawardene considers himself "fortunate" to have played in the era of great batsmen such as Sachin Tendulkar, Brian Lara, Ricky Ponting although he refused to pick his favourite contemporary.
