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Ben Youngs would like to complete this list. The 35-year-old player urged everyone to postpone career retrospectives until the season's end when he announced his retirement on Tuesday. He stated, "It's about completing this chapter of my life with some more success." "I'm not finished yet." There is already plenty of material to go at though.
Youngs has played in 127 Test matches for England, which is the most by a male player. He also played 332 matches for Leicester, two matches for the British and Irish Lions, and made his Barbarians debut in a win over Fiji in June of last year. Here are five memorable matches from a back catalogue that stretches over more than 18 years.
Youngs was part of the wider Leicester squad when the Tigers lifted the domestic crown in 2007 and 2009, but it was in 2010, still only 20, that he took a starring role.
When Youngs came on as a substitute for Ugo Monye in the 2010 match against Scotland at Murrayfield, which ended in a 15-15 draw, the first of those caps came as a temporary wing. By his fifth though, he was in his specialist spot and terrorising the world's best.
Youngs was the driving force behind Australia's Will Genia's 35-18 victory over the Wallabies, dummying on his own line to set in motion Chris Ashton's memorable coast-to-coast try. Youngs, who had carved over in his first Test start against the same opposition in June, was named man of the match.
It was difficult to recall all that optimism less than a year later. After making two final appearances, England's Rugby World Cup campaign in New Zealand never reached the first gear or the final eight. But Youngs was a bright spot amid the misery.
Richard Wigglesworth had edged ahead of Youngs in the pecking order in the run-up to the tournament.
Youngs had a daunting task when he took the field in the 50th minute of Argentina's opening match of the tournament, when his team was six points behind. It was one he rose to.
England rallied around Youngs' urgency as he upped the pace, tired out Argentina's ageing forwards and dragged his side back into the game.
He grabbed the England Nine jersey that had been his for more than a decade after sniping over for the crucial try. By the time of the 2019 tournament, Youngs' game, along with England's, had changed.
Sleight of hand rather than quick feet dictated the tempo. Youngs provided in spades as England swept past New Zealand via a blitzkrieg opening that delivered a try after just 90-odd seconds.
With his signature close-range snipe, he rolled back time and gave Anton Lienert-Brown the eye before scampering in, only to have his second-half goal disallowed for a minor knock-on in the buildup. However, England did not fall behind and reached Eddie Jones's greatest achievement.
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