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Thai investigators examining hotel room after Shane Warne’s sudden death - Sydney Morning Herald

Koh Samui: Thai forensic investigators were on Saturday evening examining the hotel room where Shane Warne died of a suspected heart attack on Friday, while Australian consular officials accompanied his devastated friends to speak with police on the holiday island.

Warne, Australia’s greatest bowler, an inspiration to a generation of cricketers and a cultural icon at home and abroad, suffered a suspected heart attack while watching the sport he loved on television at a Thai resort, amid a fitness spree. He was 52.

Shocked political leaders, musicians and cricket greats from around the world paid tribute to a man often described as larger than life, while a stand at the home of Australian sport, the Melbourne Cricket Ground, will be renamed in honour of the most successful leg-spinner of all-time.

Grief was written all over the faces of Warne’s friends on Saturday afternoon as they were left with the heartbreaking task of calling his loved ones from an office adjoining the foyer of the luxury Samujana Villas.

Police speak with Shane Warne’s friends on Saturday morning at Samujana Villas in Koh Samui.

Police speak with Shane Warne’s friends on Saturday morning at Samujana Villas in Koh Samui.Credit:Chris Barrett

“He was on holiday, having a lie down, siesta, he hadn’t been drinking, he’d been on this diet to lose weight,” said Warne’s long-time manager James Erskine.

While Warne’s death was not being treated as suspicious, police led by Lieutenant Colonel Chatchawin Narkmusik, were examining the apartment and speaking to Warne’s friends.

A staff member at the Koh Samiu Hospital said it would wait for police or Warne’s family to request an autopsy.

Present with Warne in Koh Samui were Andrew Neophitou, an executive producer on his recently released documentary, and two other friends, police said. One of the men, Gareth Edwards, runs Warne’s website.

“The family has asked for privacy at this stage,” Mr Neophitou said after meeting with police.

“We really just want to get Shane home. That’s all we want to do.”

Another man, staying at the resort but not a member of Warne’s group, also spoke to police.

Australia’s Ambassador to Thailand, Allan McKinnon, is also at the station. Other DFAT officials are travelling to Koh Samui to provide assistance to the people who had been travelling with Warne. Mr Erskine said the cricketing champion had been due to fly out of the south-east Asian nation early next week after staying on Koh Samui for five days.

Mr Erskine said Warne’s children Brooke, Summer and Jackson were “shattered” by the news of their father’s death. Warne’s father, Keith, visited his grandchildren in the early hours of Saturday morning to comfort them after the news broke.

Warne - who in 1993 bowled “the ball of the century” on his first Test cricket ball on English soil - took his famous 700th wicket at the MCG in front of his home fans, having grown up in bayside Melbourne. He took 708 Test wickets in a 145-Test career, a record for any Australian and second globally to Sri Lanka’s Muttiah Muralitharan, who said the global cricket fraternity was in shock.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison said Warne was “one of only a few that could approach the extraordinary achievements of the great Don Bradman” in Australian cricket. But he was also a giant of the country’s life and story, a “one of a kind” who brought magic to Australian summers.

“Shane was one of our nation’s greatest characters,” Mr Morrison said. “His humour, his passion, his irreverence, his approachability ensured he was loved by all. Australians loved him. We all did.”

Opposition Leader Anthony Albanese said Warne was a “phenomenal sportsman” and a legend whose extraordinary innings had ended far too soon.

“When he had the ball in his hand, he was a magician,” he said. “He was a larrikin and an artist, and he changed the game he loved in the process. To watch him in action was just one of the purest joys sport had to offer.”

Warne divided his time between Australia and the United Kingdom, becoming a friend to many English celebrities including singer Ed Sheeran, who said he was “absolutely gutted” by the loss of his “amazing friend”.

Rolling Stones frontman and cricket lover Mick Jagger said he was “so saddened” by Warne’s sudden death. “He brought such joy to the game and was the greatest spin bowler ever,” Jagger tweeted.

The front page of British tabloid The Daily Star lauded “THE GREATEST” while the back pages of Britain’s Guardian called Warne “one of the greatest cricketers of all time, who matched his almost preternatural genius with a carefree air of a kid at play”.

British front pages of cricketer Shane Warne’s death

British front pages of cricketer Shane Warne’s deathCredit:Internet

Warne’s family has been offered a state funeral by the federal government, which Mr Morrison said would be arranged in consultation with Cricket Australia and the Victorian government. The state’s premier, Daniel Andrews, announced the MCG’s Great Southern Stand would be renamed the S.K. Warne Stand as “a permanent tribute to an amazing Victorian”.

Just hours before his death, Warne had paid tribute to fellow cricket great Rod Marsh, who died in Adelaide earlier on Friday. Warne had also posted in recent days about being on a fitness spree, or “operation shred” in his words.

Mr Erskine said Warne was relaxing on holiday while getting back in shape, and that the cricketer had not been drinking despite public perceptions he liked alcohol.

“Everyone thinks he’s a big boozer but he’s not a big boozer at all. I sent him a crate of wine, 10 years later it’s still there. He doesn’t drink, never took drugs, ever. He hated drugs so nothing untoward,” Mr Erskine said.

“He was going to do the things he likes doing ... play in one or two poker competitions, play a lot of golf, be with his kids, that was about it; [to] have time to himself.”

The Indian cricket team observed a minute silence before the start of play on day two of the first Test against Sri Lanka to pay respect for both Warne and Marsh, while the women’s cricket teams of both Australian and England held a moment of silence before a match in New Zealand on Saturday.

In Melbourne, cricket fans came from across Victoria to visit the statue of Warne outside the MCG and pay their respects on Saturday.

Harry Morrow left a can of VB, a meat pie and a packet of cigarettes at Warne’s feet in memory of the man he said “was Australian cricket”. Spending a lot of time in the UK as a child, Mr Morrow said his fondest memories were of watching Warne “rip the English cricket team to shreds”.

“There was a sort of smug satisfaction watching him come out - you’d be like ‘here’s the secret weapon, he’s gonna clean ’em up’, and he always did,” he said.

Two of Warne’s teammates in a Test team that dominated world cricket, captain Ricky Ponting and bowler Glenn McGrath, expressed their grief. Batting legend Ponting said he met Warne at a cricket academy when Ponting was 15, where Warne gave him his nickname of “Punter”.

“Hard to put this into words,” Ponting wrote on Twitter. “The greatest bowler I ever played with or against. RIP King.”

McGrath said Warne had a special ability to snatch victory from the jaws of defeat on the cricket field, and said he carried this attitude off the field.

“There seemed to be never a dull moment ... Rest In Peace my good mate, there’ll never again be anyone like you,” McGrath wrote.

Former Australian wicketkeeper Ian Healy said he was upset by the death but was not surprised his former teammate died young. Warne’s weight fluctuated during his career; he said in 2019 he had dropped 14 kilograms after weighing about 98 kilograms.

“An early passing didn’t surprise me for Warnie,” Healy told Nine’s Today show. “He didn’t look after his body that well. He yo-yoed up and down.

“He didn’t put much sunscreen on. I thought it would have become skin issues for him over time, but not at 52. And he would have been full of beans right to the end, I bet.”

Muralitharan, who holds the all-time record for Test wickets taken, said the cricket world was in shock. “I was asking people if it was true or if it was fake news,” he told Fox Cricket.

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2022-03-05 09:27:01Z
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