Only three Australia have scored more runs than Clarke -- who has battled a chronic back condition throughout his career -- and the outgoing captain is also the only Australian to score a hundred on both his home and away Test debuts.
Yet Clarke won't bow out with the kind of unstinting admiration his career would appear to deserve.
Clarke, nicknamed "Pup", burst on the scene with a diamond studded ear-ring and highlights in his hair.
"Michael was more your 21st century captain, he was single, he was flashier, lived a different life to some of us in the past, but that doesn't make him a bad person, nor a bad captain," former Australia skipper Mark Taylor told ESPNCricinfo when asked about Clarke.
Clarke confirmed he would retire immediately after England's innings and 78-run win in the fourth Test at Trent Bridge earlier this month gave them an unbeatable 3-1 lead in the five-match Ashes series.
The timing of Clarke's announcement led to accusations that he had tried to make what should have been England's day "all about him", a criticism that was aired when he confirmed he would be quitting one-day internationals on the eve of Australia's World Cup final triumph against New Zealand earlier this year.
After his debut hundred in Bangalore in 2004, which he completed wearing his baggy green Australia cap rather than his helmet, Clarke like many a young player before him saw his form dip.
He was soon facing the charge that he didn't make "tough runs" and was also a "pet" of his friend, colourful spin-bowling great Shane Warne.
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