Blue skies, but wet outfield delays Test
Cricket's inability to adapt with the times is back in the spotlight with lengthy delays under blue skies ensuring the Rawalpindi Test spirals towards a draw.
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Cricket's inability to adapt with the times is back in the spotlight with lengthy delays under blue skies ensuring the Rawalpindi Test spirals towards a draw.
Iconic Melburnian Shane Warne playing for NSW seems wrong, but influential Cricket Victoria figure Shaun Graf has revealed it almost happened.
With the world mourning Shane Warne's death on social media, fans flooded to a cricket.com.au post on Twitter to celebrate the Australian legend's cricket career. The Australian cricket Twitter handle posted a video from 1999 when Warne was requested by England captain Alec Steward to make his way into the middle and help in calming a hostile MCG crowd. Tensions rose during the Australian innings when bottles and golf balls were thrown towards the England fielders from a section of the crowd. Play was also stopped at one point for nearly five minutes and garbage began to enter the boundary.
Veteran curator Daljit recalls the magical spell which single-handedly won the match for AustraliaMOHALI: It won't be an understatement to say that Shane Warne left an indelible mark on almost all cricket venues in which he played. The PCA stadium here in Mohali was witness to Warne's first magic spell in a world event. It was the World Cup semifinal against West Indies on 14 March 1996. In a match dominated by fast bowlers on a lively pitch that offered steep bounce, Warne single-handedly won the match for Australia in the last 10 overs as West Indies fell five runs short of Australia's 207.
Australian legend Shane Warne died at the age of 52 in Thailand on Friday. The news took the cricket world by storm with former and currently cricketers taking to Twitter to pass on their condolences. Ricky Ponting led the reactions from the Australian cricket community and took to Twitter to post a heartfelt message for Warne. He wrote, "Hard to put this into words. I first met him when I was 15 at the Academy. He gave me my nickname. We were teammates for more than a decade, riding all the highs and lows together. Through it all he was someone you could always count on, someone who loved his family..."
Mark Taylor thought Shane Warne's "turbulent life" would just keep rolling on forever.
Shane Warne's death, aged 52, following a suspected heart attack has shocked the sporting world.