Dean Cosker, the left-arm spinner who was the last remaining active player of Glamorgans 1997 County Championship winning side, has announced his retirement after a 21-year career.Cosker made his Glamorgan debut in 1996 and then took 20 wickets in the trophy-winning campaign the following season. He reached as far as England A level in the late 1990s and remained a consistent performer, highlighted by the fact that his best first-class season came in 2010 when he claimed 51 wickets at 22.11, but he had not played a Championship match this season.He was also immensely valuable in white-ball cricket, enjoying his best T20 season in 2015 when he took 17 wickets. Overall in first-class cricket in finished with 597 wickets, 260 in List A and 100 in T20.Alongside his bowling he was renowned as an outstanding fielder, so much so that he was used by England as a substitute during the 2015 Ashes Test in Cardiff.I feel very humbled and privileged to have had the opportunity to represent Glamorgan over the past 21 years, said Cosker. I would like to thank all the coaches, players and particularly my family that have made this possible and who have continuously supported my career throughout.I have been very lucky to rub shoulders with some of the games finest players and characters, and both on the field and in the changing room I have been able to share some fantastic times that will stay with me as great memories for years to come.I have loved my time at Glamorgan and feel proud to say this was the only county I ever wanted to play for. Leaving the spin bowling department at Glamorgan in an exciting place has always been important to me and, with positive young spin bowlers at the club coming to the fore, I believe this is the case. I am really excited about the next chapter in my life and the challenges that it will bring.Hugh Morris, the Glamorgan chief executive, who was also part of the 1997 Championship-winning side, said: Dean has enjoyed a terrific career with Glamorgan and has been a great ambassador for the Club both on and off the field for more than 20 years.It was a pleasure to play with Dean at the beginning of his career and it has been great working with him over the last few years as a professional cricketer. Muggsy Bogues Jersey .C. -- Charlotte Bobcats coach Steve Clifford said after all of these years in the NBA hes still amazed at some of the things LeBron James does. 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It sends beach-goers away and ruins barbecues, and for those having a jog on the Swan River bank, it presents a challenge similar to the one South Africa experienced at the WACA over the last five days: the challenge of being pushed back while trying to push forward before ultimately prevailing.Faf du Plessis described it as one one of the most special experiences he has been involved in. To turn around 360 degrees from day one when we were under the pump and under a lot of pressure, day two was one of the best days of cricket I have been involved in, he said.South Africas problems started before the first day, even before they even reached Perth. AB de Villiers was ruled out of the series a month before it began, which robbed them of their captain and their best batsman. If anyone thought that was a blessing in disguise, they wouldnt have dared to do anything other than whisper it. Even though Faf du Plessis leadership credentials were lauded after the 5-0 whitewash of Australia in the home ODIs and JP Duminy was starting to show signs of form, South Africa without de Villiers is a braai without the boerewors.South Africa had almost the same team as the one that lost in India and against England at home, but were different from the side they had become since Australia last saw them. Thats not even taking into account Graeme Smiths retirement, which took place almost three years ago. It sometimes seems like South Africa are yet to recover from it. They had not found an opener with Smiths sheer and consistent bloody-mindedness, at least not until day three.The pressure on Hashim Amla is also taking its toll. This is the first time in a decade that Amla had contributed just one run to a team effort. If there is a sign that winds of change were starting to blow in South Africas batting line-up, that is the strongest one.In the first innings, South Africa were blown away for 242 but the knowledge that 225 was enough four years ago would have given South Africa something to work with, even when David Warner made it look as though 600 would not be enough. The only time doubt might have swirled in their mind would have been 42 minutes before lunch on the second day when Dale Steyn went down clutching his shoulder with a look that said his Test series was over. Never mind the wider consequences of Steyns injury - and those will be felt over the next six months - in that moment, it meant South Africas head-wind had become a solid barrier. With two frontline seamers and a left-arm spinner on debut, South Africa had to take nine wickets and ensure Australia did not get too far ahead. Then, they would have to take ten more. The only person looking forward to figuring out how to make that worrk was du Plessis.ddddddddddddThere was a lot of emotion of [knowing] its going to be really tough to get a victory from here. To have a seamer down the whole Test match and do what weve done - we always joke that if you lose a seamer in a three-seamer attack, its 99% impossible to win the Test because theres just too much of a workload. But its a nice challenge. I enjoy strategic challenges where you can test yourself and do things a little bit out of the box, du Plessis said.Steyn had already got some reverse swing. Du Plessis was sure Rabada and Philander could exploit that but he needed an older ball. For that, he needed other bowlers and Maharaj was his man. He relentlessly bowled in a good area and made sure we could rotate guys. There was a period of dead cricket. We knew Vernon and KG [Rabada] werent going to bowl much so it was a process of getting there. That time in between getting the ball to reverse was the time to completely kill the game and that was Keshav. That allowed us to play around with our bowlers and luckily, the bowlers stepped up and we got the wickets.Within two sessions, South Africa had escaped the eye of the storm. Its little wonder that Steyn was shooting the breeze that night, walking the streets of Perth, fresh off a train journey from visiting his fathers brother, who lives 40 minutes outside the city. His father had made the trip this time, to visit his sibling and watch his son. He only really got to do the former.Steyn was in pain and held his right arm at ninety degrees to protect it from excess movement. He was resigned to his fate, disappointed. Several people stopped to ask Steyn for selfies and he obliged every one. He flew out of Perth on Sunday night and landed home just in time to watch the last wicket.Massive effort, Steyn tweeted, the same words he used to describe JP Duminy and Dean Elgars hundreds which allowed South Africa to direct the gusts Australias way. Then, they just copied what they did in 2012, almost to script. A big partnership put the target beyond Australias reach and the declaration came with more than enough time to bowl them out again, even though Australia showed a lot more resistance.Rabadas fitness was the hallmark of their second-innings triumph. He bowled two eight-over spells on the fourth day and an opening spell of six overs on the fifth morning. Du Plessis could not get the ball out of his hand, except to give it to to Temba Bavuma, who is emerging as a cult hero in this country. He could have a three-for, du Plessis reminded us.Ultimately, it was Bavuma who was the microcosm of South Africas performance. In the face of adversity as stiff as the Fremantle doctor, they needed each other and when they gave all they had, they reclaimed Perth and the wind stopped blowing. ' ' '