The greatest leg-spin bowler in cricket history — 708 Test wickets and the man who revived a dying art of bowling.
Shane Keith Warne was born in Upper Ferntree Gully, Victoria in 1969 and became the greatest leg-spin bowler in the history of cricket — reviving an art that had been in terminal decline. He took 708 Test wickets across 145 matches at an average of 25.41 — the most by any spinner in history. He also took 293 ODI wickets in 194 matches. He played for Victoria domestically and Hampshire in county cricket. He delivered 40,705 balls in Test cricket — more than any other bowler. His first delivery to Mike Gatting at Old Trafford in the 1993 Ashes — turning from outside leg stump to hit off — was voted the Ball of the Century by cricket journalists worldwide. He took 5 wickets in an innings 37 times and 10 wickets in a match 10 times. He took 195 Ashes wickets — the most by any bowler in the history of the series. He won 5 Ashes series and the 1999 Cricket World Cup with Australia. His variations — leg break, top spinner, flipper, wrong 'un and googly — combined with exceptional control and competitive intensity made him the most complete spin bowler the game has produced. He also scored 3,154 Test runs including 12 fifties — remarkable lower-order contributions. He was named joint Wisden Cricketer of the Century in 2000. He died of a heart attack in March 2022 in Thailand, aged 52.
ICC Cricket World Cup 1999 (Australia)
The "Ball of the Century" — his first delivery in Ashes cricket — is considered the greatest ball ever bowled in the history of the game.
Did You Know?Career Honours
- ICC Cricket World Cup 1999 (Australia)
- Ashes winner 5x
- Wisden Cricketer of Year 1994
- Ball of the Century 1993 (Mike Gatting)
- Wisden Cricketer of Century (joint) 2000
- Test wickets record (spinners) 708