Sunday Sun

Hussain lauds ‘genius’ Warne after bowler’s shock death

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NASSER Hussain credits Shane Warne with the revival of leg-spin and said he had brilliance, genius and fight.

Tributes have poured in from across the world for the former Australia leg-spinner after cricket lost one of its greatest ever figures at the age of 52.

Warne took 708 Test wickets, the second-highest ever, in 145 matches across an illustriou­s 15-year internatio­nal career. The charismati­c star also claimed 293 wickets in one-day internatio­nals and helped Australia win the World Cup in 1999.

“Leg spin was a dying art before Shane Warne burst onto the scene, we had never heard of a delivery called a flipper and then suddenly he used to set us up with it,” Hussain said.

“He used to bowl a delivery that was short and you’d think ‘Shane lost it today’ and the very next ball was the flipper and it would go straight through us.

“He was an outstandin­g cricketer. “Some people are brilliant at the game, some people have genius and some people have fight and Shane Warne had everything in abundance.

“He was also a very, very smart cricketer as we’ve seen in the commentary box since he retired from the game.”

When asked about his legacy, the former England captain said: “He’s going to be defined as the greatest spin bowler that’s every played the game, he was box office.

“He was Shane Warne, that’s all I can say. You speak to cricketers, former cricketers, you look at the reaction on social media today, he was Shane Warne, there will never be another Shane Warne.”

Warne came to prominence with a wickedly spinning leg-break to Mike Gatting in 1993. The delivery was named ‘ball of the century’ as Gatting was left confounded.

“Without a doubt, he is number one ever,” Gatting told Sky Sports. “There has been a lot of great cricketers, great spinners and great legspinner­s, but Warnie will always be certainly from my point of view the number one.”

Current Australia Test captain Pat Cummins, on tour in Pakistan, said in a video posted on Cricket Australia’s Twitter: “Warnie was an all-time great, a once-in-a-century type of cricketer and his record will live on forever.”

Glenn Mcgrath, with whom Warne formed a formidable strike partnershi­p for their country, paid a warm tribute to his friend on Instagram, while fans have placed tributes on the Shane Warne statue at the Melbourne Cricket Ground

The premier of the Australian state of Victoria, Daniel Andrews, announced the venue’s Great Southern Stand will be renamed the SK Warne Stand as a “permanent tribute to an amazing Victorian” and has also offered the Warne family a state funeral.

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