Posted on 03/04/2022 10:43:37 AM PST by nickcarraway
Shane Warne, one of cricket's all-time greats, has died of a suspected heart attack at the age of 52 in Koh Samui, Thailand, while on holiday.
Warne, who was named one of Wisden's Five Cricketers of the Century, claimed 708 Test wickets in a 15-year career for Australia between 1992 and 2007, and was also an ODI World Cup winner in 1999.
According to his manager Michael Cohen, he died of a suspected heart attack.
"Shane was found unresponsive in his villa and despite the best efforts of medical staff, he could not be revived," Cohen's statement read. "The family requests privacy at this time and will provide further details in due course."
According to Reuters, Thai Police said Warne and three other friends were staying in a private villa and one of them went to inquire about him after the former cricketer did not turn up for dinner.
"The friend did CPR on him and called an ambulance," Chatchawin Nakmusik, an officer with the Bo Put police in Koh Samui, told Reuters by phone.
"An emergency response unit then arrived and did another CPR for 10-20 minutes. Then an ambulance from the Thai International Hospital arrived and took him there. They did CPR for five minutes, and then he died."
The police did not know the cause of death but were not treating it as suspicious, Chatchawin said.
The shocking news comes hours after the death of another icon of Australian cricket, former wicketkeeper Rod Marsh, who also suffered a heart attack earlier this week at the age of 74.
"Warney", as he was known throughout the cricketing world, was without question one of the true icons of world cricket, a man who almost singlehandedly revived the art of legspin in the early 1990s.
Although luminaries such as Pakistan's Abdul Qadir had kept the art alive, Warne brought a new glamour and attacking intent to legspin, with his bottle-blond hair allied to a keen tactical brain that he used to outfox a host of unwitting opponents in his pomp.
After an underwhelming debut against India in January 1992, where his solitary wicket came at a cost of 150 runs, Warne hinted at his full potential in bowling Australia to an unlikely victory over Sri Lanka in Colombo, before - in his fifth appearance - he ripped out seven match-winning second-innings wickets against West Indies at his home ground of Melbourne in the 1992-93 Boxing Day Test.
Shane Warne's ball of the centuryIan Chappell, Mark Nicholas and Gideon Haigh look back to that magical delivery However, it was the 1993 Ashes tour that truly cemented Warne's legend. In the opening match of the series at Old Trafford, and having been shielded from England's batters during the preceding one-day series, Warne's first delivery left the sport dumbfounded as he served up the so-called "ball of the century" to Mike Gatting - a drifting, dipping, spitting legbreak, that turned a full two feet from outside leg to hit the top of off.
Gatting was so confused, he did not initially realise he had been bowled - and in that moment, Warne exerted a hold over England's batters that was so absolute, they would not come close to reclaiming the Ashes for another 12 years. And even when they did, in the seismic summer of 2005, Warne's fingers were the last to be prised from the urn, as he carried Australia's attack with a career-best haul of 40 wickets.
Away from the cricket field, Warne could not help but court controversy. He was rarely far from the front pages of the tabloids amid a string of revelations about his personal life. In 1995, both he and his then team-mate Mark Waugh were fined for giving information to an Indian bookmaker during the previous year's tour of Sri Lanka.
In 2003, on the eve of that year's 50-over World Cup, Warne was suspended from international cricket for a year after a banned diuretic was found during a routine drugs test - he claimed it had been given to him by his mother to help him lose weight.
However, though that setback might have ended lesser careers, the year away from the game arguably gave Warne an extra lease of life going into his mid-30s. He returned to action with four five-wicket hauls in a row to lead Australia to a memorable 3-0 series win in Sri Lanka in March 2004, and then played a quietly crucial role in their subsequent "final frontier" victory in India.
He retired from international cricket with typical showmanship in the 2006-07 Ashes, leaving the field arm-in-arm with his long-term bowling ally Glenn McGrath - a fellow great in one of the all-time great Test teams - after reclaiming the Ashes with a 5-0 whitewash (the first that Australia had inflicted on England since 1920-21).
Even at the age of 37, the Warne legend was not done. In 2008, he was recruited by Rajasthan Royals to captain their franchise in the inaugural season of the Indian Premier League (IPL), and duly delivered the title with 19 wickets at 21.26 in the course of the campaign. Though he went wicketless in the final against Chennai Super Kings, he couldn't be kept out of the action, as he and Sohail Tanvir sealed the victory with the bat in a thrilling final-over finish.
Prior to his IPL involvement, Warne had spent eight years (2000-2008) in county cricket with Hampshire, after being recruited as captain by his friend and England rival, Robin Smith. He claimed 276 first-class wickets at 25.59 in his time at the club, and later had a stand at the Ageas Bowl named after him.
In retirement, Warne became a trenchant commentator, primarily for Fox Sports in Australia - ever insightful on tactical matters, if at times a touch bombastic. He also dabbled in professional poker, a card game that he said replicated the sort of mind-games that he had revelled in during his playing days. He became a fixture at the Aussie Millions in Melbourne and at the World Series of Poker in Las Vegas, where in 2009, his deep run into the tournament meant that he arrived late for his commentary duties at that summer's Ashes.
Tributes to Warne have poured in from the cricket world, from team-mates and rivals alike. Brian Lara, arguably the greatest batter to have faced Warne in his pomp, tweeted an image of a broken heart, adding: "Speechless at the moment. I literally don't know how to sum up this situation. My friend is gone!! We have lost one of the Greatest Sportsmen of all time!! My condolences goes out to his family. RIP Warnie!! You will be missed."
Adam Gilchrist, Warne's team-mate in one of the greatest Test teams of all time, added: "Numb. The highlight of my cricketing career was to keep wicket to Warnie. Best seat in the house to watch the maestro at work. Have often felt a tad selfish, that Heals [Ian Healy] and I pretty much exclusively are the only ones who had that thrill and pleasure at Test level. Rip Warnie."
He would be dead dead.
That’s really bad !
looks like the the legspinner got vax cancelled
If he only would have been boosted…
RIP.
That’s it!
Oh my. That didn’t age well.
I once heard an Indian man trying to explain cricket to an American baseball fan. It was a very long and involved conversation. and kind of hilarious to listen to.
Booster shot?
I bet.
And we thought soccer had weird rules.......the clock wind UP in soccer??? What the heck is that???
The American was completely perplexed. But the Indian was extremely enthusiastic!
Yeah I hear it’s big time in India...I guess the British influence has a lot to do with it.
Either Thai hookers or the vaccine shot.
Dang, you beat me too it!
I was going to say: “According to his family, this would have been much worse had he not been vaxxed...”
Kidding by the way
Warne was a magician. He did things with a cricket ball no one had seen before, and aren’t likely to see again. Half Sandy Kaufax, half Phil Niekro.
It’s only been a couple of months since they released a documentary about him. If you’re a sports fan, check your favorite online purveyor of movies for one titled, “Shane.” FF to about 8 minutes and watch his first trip “to the mound” in the 1994 Ashes match, Oz vs England. If the first three minutes don’t hook you, don’t waste your time with the rest.
Warne also was known to pound a few back, and he liked to smoke, so coronapanic or not, dead from a heart attack at 52 doesn’t surprise me.
Oh, cricket has two sorts of “bowlers,” fast bowlers (Nolan Ryan) and spinners (Sandy Kaufax).
A right-handed leg-spin bowler throws with a YUGE amount of counterclockwise spin, so the ball takes a vicious left-hand turn when it bounces. A right-handed off-spin bowler throws with a YUGE amount of clockwise spin, which makes it bounce to the right.
Spin bowlers usually bowl at the start of an innings because the pitch is still smooth, so they can predict how the ball will bounce better. The fast bowlers come up later because by then the pitch will have been roughed up, which makes spin bowling less predictable.
And there is no rule requiring the bowler to bounce the ball in front of the batsman. Throwing straight at the wickets would be called bowling “on the full.” But bowlers almost always elect to bounce the ball because it takes a batsman with an uncommonly skilled eye to detect the spin on the ball before it’s too late.
And unlike baseball, if the batsman get hit by a pitch, it’s HIS fault, not the bowler’s. The reason batsmen wear so much more padding than batters is they get hit pretty commonly. There’s not been an MLB player killed by a pitched ball since 1920. There was a first-class cricketer killed by a bowled ball in 2014. The batsman was struck in the neck, a bit lower than his helmet covered, rupturing his vertebral artery.
“Yeah I hear it’s big time in India . . .”
Check out the movie “Lagaan” - it’s very Bollywood, and kind of long, but it’s got plenty of cricket (which for many makes it even longer).
Oh, my.
Been watching a lot of videos of him since I heard the news.
That was a wicked googly!
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