Shane Warne, one of cricket’s iconic players, dies at 52
Warne was considered to be the greatest bowler in cricket history and helped Australia win the World Cup in 1999.
hane Warne, widely regarded as one of the greatest players, most astute tacticians and ultimate competitors in the long history of cricket, has died. He was 52.
Known right around the cricket globe as “Warnie,” he revived and elevated the art of leg spin bowling when he emerged on the international scene in the 1990s and was a central character in one of Australia’s most successful eras in the sport. He was one of cricket’s larger-than-life showmen off the field during and after his playing career.
Fox Sports television, which employed Warne as a commentator, quoted a family statement early Saturday as saying he died of a suspected heart attack in Koh Samui, Thailand.
“Shane was found unresponsive in his villa and despite the best efforts of medical staff, he could not be revived,” Fox Sports said in the statement said. “The family requests privacy at this time and will provide further details in due course.”
Cricket Australia later confirmed his death in a statement saying the “whole cricketing world is in a state of shock at the loss of Shane Warne, a true cricketing genius.”
“Shane’s strength of character and enormous resilience saw him bounce back from career-threatening finger and shoulder injuries, and his stamina and his sheer will to win, and his self-belief were key factors in Australia’s great side of the late 1990s and early 2000s.”
Police in Thailand said Warne’s body was transferred to Ko Samui Hospital for an autopsy. Police added they did not find any wounds on Warne’s body.
The Australian men’s national team was told of Warne’s death after play on the first day of the series-opening test match against Pakistan in Rawalpindi.
“We all grew up watching Warnie, idolizing him,” Australia captain Pat Cummins said. “What we loved so much about Warnie was his showmanship, his charisma, his tactics, the way he willed himself and the team around him to win games for Australia, and above all else his incredible skills as a leg-spinner.
“The game was never the same after Warnie emerged and the game will never be the same after his passing. Rest in peace, King.”
Warne held the record for most test wickets (708) when he retired in 2007 after his 145th test match. Only Sri Lanka great Muttiah Muralitharan has passed him, with 800.
“Spinning was a dying art, really, till Shane Warne came along,” renowned cricket commentator Jonathan Agnew told the BBC.
Among his career highlights were back-to-back player-of-the-match awards in the semifinals and final of the 1999 Cricket World Cup, being included among the Five Cricketers of the 20th Century by the Wisden Cricketers’ Almanack, colloquially known as the sport’s bible, and being part of five Ashes-winning teams against England. He also played in 194 one-day internationals.
Warne made an underwhelming test debut at the Sydney Cricket Ground in 1992 but quickly rose to become a key figure across all formats during one of the greatest sustained periods of dominance by any team in world cricket.
He had accumulated career figures of 1-335 when he got the ball during the second innings of his third test, against Sri Lanka in ’92, and finished the match by taking three wickets without conceding a run in 13 deliveries to secure the victory.
Warne was often thrown the ball when Australia was in trouble or desperate for a wicket, and so often he was able to turn a precarious position into a victory with a mesmerizing spell of bowling,
He wrote himself into folklore when he delivered the “Ball of the Century” with his first toss of the 1993 Ashes tour, bowling Mike Gatting with a delivery that turned from well outside leg stump to clip the off bail.
“It’s one of those wonderful highlights of the game,” Gatting said in 2018. “One of those bits of history that belongs not only to me but to probably the best legspinner of all time.”
Warne was noted as much for his life off the field as on it.
Just before the 2003 World Cup in South Africa, he was banned for 12 months for taking a prohibited substance, which he said was in a diuretic his mother had given him to “improve his appearance.” But he returned in 2004 and in the third Ashes test of 2005 he became the first bowler in history to take 600 test wickets.
In 1998, the Australian Cricket Board confirmed that Warne and Mark Waugh had been fined four years earlier for providing pitch and weather information to an Indian bookmaker during Australia’s tour of Sri Lanka in 1994.
Warne’s exploits off the field took their toll on his marriage and he split from wife Simone, the mother of his three children. He later had a relationship and became engaged to English actress Liz Hurley in 2010. The pair eventually split in 2013.
Warne’s death came only a few hours after he expressed his sadness and condolences following the death of another Australian great, wicketkeeper Rodney Marsh, at age 74.
“He was a legend of our great game & and inspiration to so many young boys and girls,” Warne posted on Twitter. “Rod cared deeply about cricket & gave so much – especially to Australia & England players. Sending lots & lots of love to Ros & the family. RIP mate.”
After the shock news of Warne’s death, tributes flowed in cricket’s iconic stars and high-profile fans including Mick Jagger and actor Russell Crowe.
“Will miss you Warnie,” India great Sachin Tendulkar posted on Twitter. “There was never a dull moment with you around, on or off the field. Will always treasure our on field duels & off field banter. You always had a special place for India & Indians had a special place for you. Gone too young!”
West Indies great Brian Lara echoed Tendulkar.
“My friend is gone!!” Lara said. “We have lost one of the Greatest Sportsmen of all time!! RIP Warnie!! You will be missed.”
Born in Upper Ferntree Gully near Melbourne, Warne showed prodigious talent from a young age and won a sports scholarship to a prestigious high school. After a brief attempt to become a professional Australian rules football player in 1988, he went to train at the Australia Cricket Academy in Adelaide and made his first-class debut in 1991.
Warne is survived by his children Jackson, Brooke and Summer, his parents Bridgette and Keith, and brother Jason.
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