News Sports Cricket Kevin Pietersen's book rocked cricket but dig a little deeper

Kevin Pietersen's book rocked cricket but dig a little deeper

Kevin Pietersen's autobiography seems to have an endless stream of sad score-settling.But while the former England batsman's claims of a bullying culture are certainly worthy of investigation, it's KP's mass of contradictions that leap off

First-class puzzle

Pietersen still maintains that it is his wish to play international cricket again and that he hopes certain changes of personnel at the top might help him. ‘If I was offered the opportunity to play Test cricket again for England I would jump at the chance. I dream of playing for England again,' he says in the book.

Yet this summer, when he was contracted to Surrey, he failed to play a single day's first-class cricket for the county, apparently disappointing his old mentor Graeme Ford. It was a strange way to push the case that he fervently wanted to play Test cricket again.

Tweet and sour

KP made much of how the spoof Twitter account @KPGenius upset him and how it led to him breaking down in tears in front of Flower, of all people.

Yet Pietersen received requests to stop Piers Morgan tweeting abuse about players, in particular Alastair Cook, to Morgan's huge audience. When these approaches were made he told his colleagues that they needed a thicker skin.