WATCH: Paul Collingwood’s creative sofa made out of his jerseys

Cricketers do have various styles of keeping things creative around them. One has often seen players putting their equipment nicely and in an attractive manner. Former English cricketer Paul Collingwood has now taken it to a different level. In his recent Instagram post, he displayed a sofa to his fans and viewers that looked absolutely amazing. His cute sofa was done in all the colourful jerseys he wore at some point of time in his life.

The sofa that he displayed looked truly amazing and colourful as well. While Collingwood took to his IG handle, he kept explaining everything with his voice in the background. “Thought, I’d experiment making a Chesterfield sofa out of some of the shirts I played in over the years! It’s colourful!! Which badge is your favourite?! (And yes those are my old knees creaking halfway through the video!)” he added in his caption.

Here is Paul Collingwood’s IG video displaying the attractive sofa

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Paul Collingwood (@paulcollingwood5)

Paul Collingwood on the professional front

Talking about Collingwood on the professional front, he played 68 Test for England scoring 4259 runs at an average of 40.56. He donned the English jersey in 197 ODIs scoring 5078 runs at an average of 35.65. He played for Durham Cricket County Club and captained it for the final six seasons of his career. He was a batting all-rounder whose batting had natural stroke play.

During early 2010, the former cricketer led his national TewntyT20 side to the 2010 World Twenty20 championship. Though he struggled with the bat as he could only score 61 runs in the seven games played, he guided his team successfully to the glory. He had a poor run in the 2010-11 Ashes series and following that, he announced his retirement from Test cricket.

Due to his performance in 2010, he was named in World ODI XI by the International Cricket Council (ICC). Later, after leaving international cricket, he took up coaching as his career prospect. He was the first Durham player to score a Test ton for the England side.