Premier Daniel Andrews confirms a state funeral for the cricket legend who died suddenly aged 52.
“He went in there … and then realised something was wrong. Rolling Stones frontman and passionate cricket fan Mick Jagger tweeted: “He brought such joy to the game and was the greatest spin bowler ever.” “They have been very compassionate, very efficient and very understanding,” he said. “They were going to have a drink … or go and meet someone to go out and have a drink at 5pm and Neo knocked on his door at 5.15pm because Warnie is always on time,” Erskine said. “It will be an opportunity for Victorians to pay tribute to his contribution to his sport, to our state and the country,” Andrews said. “He did go on these ridiculous sort of diets, and he was just finished with one,” James Erskine told Nine’s Weekend Today on Sunday.
Shane Warne's family has been "shattered" by the sudden death of the Australian cricket great, and his children are in "complete shock," his long-time ...
"It was a bit all or nothing. Warne was discovered unconscious in his room in a villa he shared with three associates in the Bo Phut area of the popular holiday island. This is like a bad dream'." They were not treating his death as suspicious. "His friends also said that he had had chest pain since he was in Australia, but we still need an autopsy result to find out the true cause of death." The police said there were no indications that the cause of his death was not a heart attack.
Thai authorities are preparing to conduct an autopsy on the body of Shane Warne before flying him home where he will receive a state funeral.
He was a "hero" to the current generation of cricketers, said Australian captain Pat Cummins. The first bowler to take 700 Test wickets with an assortment of leg-breaks, googlies, flippers and his own "zooters", Warne retired from Australia duty in 2007 following a 5-0 series win at home to arch-rivals England. Bursting onto the scene as a brash young player with a shock of blond hair, Warne became almost as well known for his colourful life away from cricket as he was for his exploits on the field. Credited with reviving the art of leg-spin, Warne was part of a dominant Australian Test team in the 1990s and 2000s and helped his country win the 1999 limited-overs World Cup. KOH SAMUI - Thai authorities were preparing Sunday to conduct an autopsy on the body of Australian cricket superstar Shane Warne, who died of a suspected heart attack, before flying him home where he will receive a state funeral. Thai authorities are preparing to conduct an autopsy on the body of Shane Warne before flying him home where he will receive a state funeral.
Thai authorities were preparing on Sunday to conduct an autopsy on the body of Shane Warne, before flying him home where he will receive a state funeral.
He was a “hero” to the current generation of cricketers, said Australian captain Pat Cummins. Pakistan leader and ex-player Imran Khan paid his respects to “a bowling genius”, while former Australia teammate Adam Gilchrist said he was “numb”. The first bowler to take 700 Test wickets with an assortment of leg-breaks, googlies, flippers and his own “zooters”, Warne retired from Australia duty in 2007 following a 5-0 series win at home to arch-rivals England. Bursting onto the scene as a brash young player with a shock of blond hair, Warne became almost as well known for his colourful life away from cricket as he was for his exploits on the field. Credited with reviving the art of leg-spin, Warne was part of a dominant Australian Test team in the 1990s and 2000s and helped his country win the 1999 World Cup. The player – one of the greatest Test cricketers of all time – was found unresponsive in a Samujana resort villa on Friday after failing to meet friends.
Shane Warne mixed legendary cricket deeds with lurid headlines away from the pitch in a career as bewitching as his famed wrong 'un.
At one point he was engaged to British actress Liz Hurley. And yet, his performance in Australia's failed Ashes campaign in England in 2005 is regarded by some pundits as the pinnacle of his career, when he overcame his disintegrating marriage and a tabloid frenzy to take 40 wickets. He was a master of mind games, targeting batsmen ahead of a series and warning he was working on a new mystery ball to bowl out his "bunnies" in the opposition line-up. He not only resurrected the waning art of leg-spin, but became the first bowler to take 700 Test wickets and delivered the most famous ball in the sport's history. Along with flowers laid by his statue at the Melbourne Cricket Ground on Saturday, there was a can of beer, a packet of cigarettes and a meat pie; a nod to the unconventional sporting lifestyle that won him legions of fans on and off the field. While his discipline, passion and sheer talent drove him to the 708 Test wickets in a 145-Test career that made him the scourge of batsmen worldwide, the tubby blonde kid who became a superstar did things his way.
Shane Warne turned dreams into nightmares for a generation of South African cricketers, and he was the villain of the piece for many fans, writes Stuart ...
He turned dreams into nightmares for a generation of South African cricketers, and he was the villain of the piece for many fans. Warne was telling all of them that his time was most likely up and that the match would be his last ODI. Warne took 4/29 and was named man of the match. Warne started his spell in the 11th over. It was Warne, who at the last minute in the team meeting the night before told everyone not to walk if Herschelle Gibbs took a catch, because he had a habit of “show boating.” “Good point Warney,” Waugh recalled someone saying. It’s worth recalling that Australia wasn’t in good shape at the 1999 World Cup. Neither was Warne. He and Australia’s captain at the time Steve Waugh were at logger-heads - with Warne still bristling about being overlooked for the captaincy following Mark Taylor’s retirement. But the players respected him - and enjoyed the post match drinks in his company - and the fans, grudgingly, enjoyed him. It was a sign of respect, even though it didn’t seem so at the time. A much bigger impact would come in the semifinal a few days later. “Mate, some of the Aussie Test players are doing media later, Warnie’s gonna be up, he’s got quite a bit he wants to get off his chest, you should get down there,” he said. A psychological grenade tossed at South Africa on the eve of a series decider aimed specifically at Smith, someone Warne enjoyed baiting. With the series on the line and South Africa grimly blocking out for a draw in the Durban gloom in the second Test, Warne delivered, claiming 6/86 his best figures on South Africa soil.