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Mar 8, 2022

Shane Warne: The man who hit the 'best ball of the century'

 

Shane Warne: The man who hit the 'best ball of the century'

 

Shane Warne
Shane Warne

Shane Keith Warne (born September 13, 1979, Frontier Street, Victoria - died March 4, 2022, in Mount Samui, Thailand) was a former Australian cricket team’s leading league spin bowler. He has played for Australia, Hampshire, ICC World XI, Melbourne Stars, Rajasthan Royals, the rest of the World XI, and Victoria. And represented the Australian national team in the 194 ODIs. Widely regarded as one of the greatest bowlers in the history of cricket, Warne was named one of the Cricketers of the Year at the 1994 Wisden Cricketers' Tragic. Despite being banned from the sport in 2003 for testing positive for a prohibited substance, he was named Wisden's Leading Cricketer of 2004 in the 2005 Wisden Cricketers Tragic. In 2000, he was selected by a panel of cricket experts as one of the five Wisden cricketers of the century, the only expert bowler to be selected in the fifth, and still playing only one. That all of the cricket in July 2013 Formats formally retired. In addition to playing internationally, Warne played domestic cricket for his home state of Victoria and English domestic cricket for Hampshire. He captained Hampshire for three seasons from 2005 to 2007. Warne made his Test debut in 1992 and took over 1,000 international wickets (in Tests and ODIs), second only to Matthew Murali Dharan of Sri Lanka. Warne's 708 Test wickets were the record for most wickets by a bowler in Test cricket but were later broken by Murali Dharan on December 3, 2007. A useful lower-order batsman, Warne is the only player to have 3, He has scored more than 1,000 Test runs without a century. His career has been marked by off-field controversies, including a ban on cricket if he tested positive for illicit substances, allegations of defaming the game by taking money from bookmakers, and sexual harassment. Pathways are included. He retired from international cricket in January 2007 after Australia's 5-0 Ashes series win over England. Glenn McGrath, Damien Martin, and Justin Langer, three other members of the Australian team at the time, also retired from the Tests at the same time, leading some to call it "the end of an era", including Australia captain Ricky Ponting. They are Australia's "biggest ODI team ever". I was nominated as a bowler in a fan poll conducted by Cricketers Tragic in 2017, which ranked him among the best Ashes XI in the country for the last 40 years. On the 150th anniversary of the cricketers' tragedy, Wisden included him in the all-time Test World XI. After retiring from international cricket, Warne played a full season in Hampshire in 2007. He was due to appear in the 2008 English cricket season, but at the end of March 2008, he announced his retirement from playing first-class cricket so that he could “Spend more time pursuing interests outside of cricket. He played for Rajasthan Royals in the first four seasons of the Indian Premier League (2008-2001), where he played both the role of captain and coach. He led his team to victory against Chennai Super Kings in the final of the 2008 season. In February 2018, Rajasthan Royals appointed Warne as their team mentor for IPL 2018. In 2013, Warne was inducted into the ICC Cricket Hall of Fame. In 2012, he was inducted into the Cricket Hall of Fame by Cricket Australia.

Shane Warne
Shane Warne


Youth, football and  

Shane Warne combines legendary cricketing works with headlines off the pitch in his career, as fascinating as his famous misleading 'N'.

Warne, who died of a suspected heart attack at the age of 52, has never been one-half steps in his extraordinary 15-year Test career.

The greatest of these, the league spinner, developed a fabulous lifestyle out of the mold of traditional cricket icons, often at odds with the game's purists.

Vangelis Warne did things his way and will be remembered for his arrogance and outspokenness as much as for the 708 Test wickets in his 145 Test career that made him a scapegoat for batsmen around the world.

Warne is part of Australia's sports pantheon - in the eyes of many, he is second only to the immortal Don Bradman in cricket.

Nevertheless, her achievements have been influenced by some people's desire for a charming private life, including an occasional engagement to British actress Liz Hurley.

But there is no doubt about Warne's involvement in cricket, especially after he revived the art of league spin, becoming the first bowler to take 700 Test wickets and deliver the most famous ball in the history of the game.

Maker of "Ball of the century"
 Maker of "Ball of the century"


Ball of the Century

Warne published inappropriate 1-150 figures in his 1992 Test debut but was subdued by spin coach Terry Jenner. Eighteen months later, Shane Warne made a splash in the world of cricket with his "Ball of the Century" against England.

Shane Warne's first leg-break delivery in the Ashes Test fraudulently replaced England's Mike Gatting at Old Trafford in 1993, announcing the arrival of the cricket superstar.

He was an expert in mind games, hitting batsmen before the series and warning that he was working on a new mystery ball to get his "rabbits" out in the opposing lineup.

He was Man of the Match when Australia won the World Cup in 1999 and was known for his fast and innovative cricketing brain, which has long led him to be regarded as the Australian Test captain.

But even Warne himself once described his life as a soap opera, causing controversy off the field.

Warne, also known as "Hollywood", escaped drug and bookmaking scandals and lived a passionate love life that is believed to have paid the price for his captaincy of Australia. Û”

In 1998, it was revealed that Warne and his teammate Mark Waugh had been fined three years ago for providing information to an Indian bookmaker.

Warne was removed from the vice-captaincy of the Australian team in 2000 after it was revealed that he had bombed an English nurse with obscene text messages after meeting her in a nightclub.

A series of infidelities led to his public breakup with his 10-year-old wife, Simon, with whom he had three children.

Shane Warne
Shane Warne


Success despite scandals

And yet her performance in Australia's failed Ashes campaign in England in 2005 was hailed by some pundits as the culmination of her career when she overcame her broken marriage and tabloid obsession to take 40 wickets.

He also missed the 2003 World Cup in South Africa when he tested positive for a banned diuretic - a weight loss pill sometimes used to mask steroids - during a tournament. In the drug scandal that banned him for a year.

Warne returned to Test cricket in March 2004 but never played one-day internationals again, instead of focusing on the long form of the game.

Warne continued to play after the end of his Test career in January 2007 and wrote the script to win the title with the Rajasthan Royals in the first edition of the Indian Premier League in 2008, highlighting his motivational skills.

But his last season in charge of Rajasthan in 2011 did not expect a fairy tale finale.

He got off to a good start, initially battling batsmen with his turn and flying, but gradually lost his rhythm as even inexperienced youngsters started hitting him sixes easily and regularly.

Troubles off the field also ruined his holiday season.

He had an affair with a local cricket administrator, had an altercation with Indian superstar Sachin Tendulkar, and appeared frustrated in his final matches after criticizing the pitch used in domestic games.

Warne then returned home to help start Australia's Big Bash League, and in his first two seasons helped lift the profile of the domestic Twenty20 league as one of his biggest drawcards. Played a role.

Warne was inducted into the International Cricket Council Hall of Fame at Lord's in 2013, just days after his career finally took off.

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