Woman's rare condition sees her hips crack 'like bowling balls being dropped'
It took a woman 22 years to be diagnosed with an incurable condition despite her hips making noises "like bowling balls being dropped."
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It took a woman 22 years to be diagnosed with an incurable condition despite her hips making noises "like bowling balls being dropped."
Andrew Symonds, who died in a car accident, during their IPL game here on Sunday. The flamboyant all-rounder died on Saturday night. He was 46 and is survived by his wife and two young children.
Andrew Symonds has left sports lovers from across the globe shocked, including Bollywood film stars Sanjay Dutt, Farhan Akhtar and Arjun Rampal, who remembered the all-rounder for his passion for the game. Symonds, who was lovingly known as 'Roy', died at the age of 46 in a car accident on Saturday night in Queensland. The cricketer is survived by his wife and two children.
F1 staged its inaugural Miami Grand Prix last weekend, attracting a sell-out crowd and a host of big name celebrities in a vibrant new event for the series.
These are some of the rugby headlines on Sunday May 15
Symonds' sudden death triggered an outpouring of emotional tributes in the cricketing world with a host of past and present players, including his Australian teammates and international stars, expressing shock and disbelief at the tragic news. From former Australian wicketkeeper Adam Gilchrist and pacer Jason Gillespie to India's Harbhajan Singh and Sachin Tendulkar, tributes poured in for the flamboyant all-rounder, who died in a car accident on Saturday night in Queensland.
Symonds, who died on Saturday night in a car crash aged 46, was instantly recognisable on the cricket field with a mop of dreadlocks poking out from his baggy green cap and lips gleaming with white zinc cream. A hulking presence at 6ft 2in (1.87m) with a grin as broad as his shoulders, he was a supremely talented all-rounder equally at home bowling spin or lively medium-pace.
Former Pakistan pacer Yasir Arafat's son seems to be going his father's way, as he displayed his own fast bowling skills in a junior game for his club Bromley CC. Arafat took to Twitter to share a video of his son Ammaar getting opposition batters out off back-to-back deliveries but just missing out on a hat-trick. The youngster, who bowls left-arm pace, got under the opponent's bat with a well-executed yorker for his first wicket and then bamboozled the second batter with a better one off the next delivery.