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Flowers, beers, ciggies and a meat pie: Australian fans mark Shane Warne's death

Warne's fittingly one-and-a-half times larger than life bronze statue, stunned fans in his native Melbourne made votive offerings of flowers, beer, cigarettes and a meat pie Saturday, remembering an imperfect hero whose outsized skill and personality transcended cricket. When the "King of Spin" attended the unveiling of his likeness outside his beloved Melbourne Cricket Ground more than a decade ago, he quipped that the "wonderful" result made the "about four hours" the sculptor had spent measuring between his nose and ears worthwhile.

Read AlsoShane Warne's persona was larger than life

Shane Keith Warne, the man who made leg-spin bowling sexy again in the 1990s after Pakistan's maverick Abdul Qadir had done the same in the 1970s and 80s, and illuminated the cricketing stage, courtesy his arresting duels with legendary batsmen Brian Lara and Sachin Tendulkar, passed away after a

But joking aside, Warne said he relished the idea that the statue would be a future reference point -- a place for ordinary Australians to come together. "It's a pretty amazing walk down to the MCG for whatever it is you're doing," he said. "So to have a place here where people can meet and say 'I'll meet you at the Shane Warne statue' will be nice."

(AP Photo)Now, on one damp Saturday morning a decade later, fans arranged to meet "at the Shane Warne statue" to mark his untimely death aged 52 and join in their shared grief. "I'm not even a massive cricket person," said John Haddad "but I've met him before and he's not much different in age. It hits home."

For much of the last 30 years, Warne the man has been a reference point that brought Australians together. From his 1992 Test debut against India to his incisive commentary -- now as much a

Read more on timesofindia.indiatimes.com