@@JasonX2 I think most people in Sri Lanka love Murali because he is a national treasure, but I think deep-down, they already know that Warne was the better player, just because of his mentality, and brilliant cricketing brain.
37:39 A strong message to the woke community and the easily offended cunts who want to abuse people because they have opinions entirely different to them and that things are easily offensive to them.
Fantastic cricketer. How is it possible that an ex-athlete albeit a smoker and a drinker and a carbaholic, would not go for a heart check-up, or be forced to by his management team, as part of a general annual health check is beyond me. We waz robbed of a fantastic personality.
As a Kiwi, thought the dude was a dick head. However, after informing myself about the guy, I saw the doco "Shane' literally a month before he died. He comes across as a decent bloke. Moreover, his playing and coaching in the IPL was a real credit to him.
This definitely has to be one of the best interviews/documentaries I have ever seen of the great man!! Touched on all the controversies and spoke so clearly and honestly about each one of them. The cherry on top would have been his sporting relationship with India, winning the inaugural IPL, and his role in the Hundred. Thank you Sky Sports and thank you Idrees Yousafzi for this video. Will miss the King!
Not only best in his career he was such a honest or pure hearted man,no hypocrisy,left so many heart broken and must say Australian cricket board and media as well as English media were badly after him to bring him somehow down but he was Loved then ever before by his People( not only Australians but all cricket lovers),the worst is that all good people have to be through painful times of their lives 💔🤲
Shane is just a normal likeable bloke Man that could spin a cricket ball better than any one who ever lived. He had to put up with the stress of being great at wha he did .
I'd put warney in the top 5 sportspeople who ever lived, let alone cricket. He IS exemplary, and his energy will never leave this planet. Wonderful person.
The diarrhetic pill and supposed performance enhancing decision handed down turned out to be an absolute joke. I'm tough in my opinions of drugs in professional sport however even at the time it was known that that type of drug was questionable as to whether it could have any meaningful effect in possibly hiding any performance enhancing drugs and was later removed from the list completely. Sadly the way Warne's fat pill story was reported made it sound far less convincing when handled through a 'read' prepared statement rather than letting the man speak candidly as he since did about it various times. Other athletes in much more recent years have also been banned for having mere trace elements of substances that hide performance enhancing drugs in their system which were proven to be so small that they couldn't have had any effect and were most likely picked up via food preparation contamination (due to the incredibly low detected amounts) and yet who have also been scrubbed out for years despite never taking a banned drugs. The other cases I'm referring to were involving trace levels akin to the amount of alcohol found in a lemon lime and bitters drink as composed to a mouthful (let alone glass) of actual alcohol, as opposed to higher levels that would likely (let alone definitely) indicate that someone is taking masking drugs or performance enhancing drugs with those substances in them. To be clear, the problem is not with the science of it but rather with how it is administered and judged by doping authorities. In trying to combat a previously incredibly widespread problem there seems to have been a big overreaction namely in regard to what levels of substances found in masking drugs are dictated by doping authorities to have an effect. While Warne's case is a little different to the other cases I'm thinking of (purely because his detected levels of that banned substance were much higher than the other cases I'm referring to, even though that drug/pill he took has since been proven to have no effect in masking performance enhancing drugs) at the time I didn't buy Warne's assessment that the anti-doping bodies were "hysterical" in how they measure certain substances and their levels (mainly the type of substances that can be used to try to mask actual performance enhancing drugs). However he is correct. It is to ridiculous levels, and the time, energy and costs incurred by various anti-doping agencies put into such cases would be much better spent if they were acumulatively put into efforts to combat deliberate and concerted efforts by several countries in using their own anti-doping agencies to actually hide cheaters from their own countries, particularly the few countries where organised doping has taken place, or used by the government's from which the funds came to fund public health services / help people in need.
I loved his commentary. I really thought he would become the next Richie Benaud (God bless), and be the voice of cricket for decades. Its such a shame. The world has become a little less fun since he passed.