by am Bays » Thu Dec 21, 2006 8:36 pm
Friday, June 4, 1993, approximately 11:00 pm I was up that night trying to finish off an 3rd year uni assignment due on the Monday of SWOT vac. I had the radio on listening to the match. The POMS were 1/80 chasing 289 in the Ist Test at Old Trafford and AB has thrown the ball to Warney his first ball in test cricket in England would he be able to run through the POMS like he went through Sri Lanka and to a lesser extent the Windies in 92-93?
I can't remember who was on it might have been Neville Oliver, or Brian Johnston but suffice to say they had no idea what happened, I quickly turned the TV on and saw with my own eyes that Ball and Ritchie going as ballistic as he can...
from that moment on Warne was compulsory viewing as Ian Cover said in his book Merv and Me,
At the MCG I saw an amazing thing. Groups of football fans were turning their backs on the cream of Victoria's and South Australia's Aussie Rules stars to gather at TV monitors tuned to sky channel. Between races Sky was showing highlights of the previous nights cricket. Everyone was glued to the screens waiting for a glimpse of the Warne wizardry
That ball defined Warne, from that moment on you knew that you had to watch him as any moment he was capable of producing a Jaffa that could produce a wicket out of nothing. We as spectators new it, this team mates knew it, the opposition knew it and he knew it. He could never be undersestimated or taken lightly as he was capable of anything. When the ball was in his hands a wicket was a distinct possiblilty every ball.
We saw it time and time again, Gooch later that searies at Edgebaston, Gary Kirsten next summer at Adelaide Oval on day five out of the rough to win the game to draw the series, Bsit Ali, any ball to Cullinan, the list go on.
I was fortunate to see his wizardry 1st hand two years ago 'keeping at the Australian training session in Darwin. After Gilly finished his session I got to 'keep to Shane for two balls. 1st ball on a fifth day dead pitch he drifted it down leg side, Martyn went to leave it, the ball pitched in the rough just past his front foot and it has jumped and fizzed between Martyn and myself, over the top of the stumps and past my right shoulder, at that moment I thought to myself (even though I knew it already), "Hmm this bloke is really that good!!" As a hack 'keeper I had no chance, next ball he bowled Martyn played with a dead bat, so I never got to take a ball that Warne bowled even though I was behind the stumps for two of them. McGill I could read and take off the pitch it was that slow and he didn't put as much work on the ball, Warne you had to watch the hand or you were no chance!!!
Out of 397 test palyers he is #2 on our list, one of the rare players in any sport to change the game or the ethos of how a game is played. it was cool to be a spinner again, once where we had off spinners we now we want Leggies.
Who else rememebrs the buzz at Adelaide oval in 94-95 when McIntyre came on to bowl so we had two leggies bowling at the same time, incomprehnsible before Shane came on to the scene. FWIW McIntyre and to a lesser extent McGill owe their test careers to Shane as they wouldn't have got a game if it wasn't for Shane making leg spin popular again.
To Shane Warne I say thank you for the 15 years of cricketing joy you have provided us, the game is the richer for you gracing it and the poorer for you leaving it but you leave Australian cricket in a better state than what it was in January 1992.
Thank you Shane you are the greatest cricketer I've had the pleasure of watching
Last edited by
am Bays on Thu Dec 21, 2006 10:31 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Let that be a lesson to you Port, no one beats the Bays five times in a row in a GF and gets away with it!!!