|
July 10, 2009
![]()
|
||
|
Related Links
Features : Warnie's latest trick
Players/Officials:
Shane Warne
Series/Tournaments:
Australia tour of England and Scotland
Teams:
Australia
|
||
All of the build-up to Sky Sports' coverage of this summer's Ashes has centred on the fact that they have landed the big one - Shane Warne is the face of their "Australian summer", with a string of high-profile adverts promoting the fact that he will be offering up his pearls of wisdom as one of the lead commentators for the series, alongside the likes of Ian Botham and Nasser Hussain.
However, the series is already into its third day, and while Warne's parents, Keith and Bridget, have made it to Cardiff to witness the first ever Test at the venue (a prospect that Warne himself denounced as "a disgrace" back in May), their errant son is nowhere to be seen.
Instead, he has spent the week blazing a trail at the prestigious World Series of Poker tournament in Las Vegas, where his renowned attributes of spin, showmanship, bluffing and opponent-reading have been standing him in impressive, and lucrative, stead. On July 8, just as Cardiff was becoming the 100th Test venue in the world, Warne was celebrating his progression to Friday's day three of the WSOP, as one of 607 survivors from his half of the second-day draw, and one of 2044 overall.
As many as 6,494 players stumped up the initial US$10,000 buy-in for the first round of the World Championship no-limit hold'em event, which was established back in 1970 and has gone on to become, much like the Ashes, the game's indisputed blue-riband contest. Past winners have included Phil "The Poker Brat" Hellmuth and Chris "Jesus" Ferguson, and the accompanying WSOP Bracelet is the game's most coveted badge of honour.
The final table of this year's tournament takes place on July 15 - which, coincidentally, is the eve of the second Test at Lord's. Sky officials remain adamant that Warne will eventually arrive to fulfil his contractual obligations, but he is reported to have a sizeable stack of 173,700 chips to carry him into the sharp end of the competition, having just missed out on the prizemoney in the 2008 event. Given that the 2009 winner is expected to take home more than US$10 million, by the end of the week, there may be no easy way to persuade him to return to England.
In between hands, Warne's schedule has involved hanging out with the likes of the rap star Nelly and the Hollywood actor Matt Damon, and he has caused further "tittle-tattle" - in the words of one Sky insider - with rumours of his off-table reconciliation with his ex-wife Simone Callahan and their three children.
On Sunday, ahead of the second round of the WSOP, Warne and Callahan were spotted at the Wimbledon Men's Final in London, after the couple flew back to Britain for a Twenty20 fixture between Warne's IPL side, Rajasthan Royals, and Middlesex. The match was billed as his final competitive fixture at Lord's, and Warne claimed four-over figures of 1 for 24 in a 46-run victory, but the idea of getting back involved in cricket could hardly have been further from his mind, as he revealed in his blog last week.
"On Wednesday night we had our 888 launch party at the Kingpin suite at The Palms," he wrote. "The room had a two-lane bowling alley and pool table which was awesome. I'll have to fly to London tomorrow for an exhibition cricket match and then will return on Tuesday morning for Day 2 - any offers of a private plane are welcome!"
| ||||||
| Comments have now been closed for this article |
||||||
UK editor Andrew Miller was saved from a life of drudgery in the City when his car caught fire on the way to an interview. He took this as a sign and fled to Pakistan where he witnessed England's historic victory in the twilight at Karachi (or thought he did, at any rate - it was too dark to tell). He then joined Wisden Online in 2001, and soon graduated from put-upon photocopier to a writer with a penchant for comment and cricket on the subcontinent. In addition to Pakistan, he has covered England tours in Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, South Africa, Australia and New Zealand, as well as the World Cup in the Caribbean in 2007
Click here to win Lufthansa tickets to India
Play Lufthansa Fantasy Cricket and other games!
Get your England ODI & Test replica kit
Buy now at Cricshop.com - leading online cricket store
Pre-order 2010 Wisden Cricketer's almanack
Buy now at Cricshop.com - leading online cricket store
Access your Indian Rupee earnings from anywhere in the world.
Warne is the best at hia art bar none, simply because he is legall in what he does.The ICC hasnt had to change the rules to accomodate him, unlike some other spinners in the world!!
Posted by kunal83 on (July 10 2009, 19:25 PM GMT)Warnie.. delivers a beauty again, this time of the poker variety.
Posted by liverkewe11 on (July 10 2009, 18:45 PM GMT)SOUL4REAL: You need to remember that Murali has taken 176 of his wickets against Zimbabwe and Bangladesh. Warne only took 17 of his wickets against Zimbabwe and Bangladesh. Murali has also spent the majority of his career bowling on spin friendly subcontinent wickets.Murali protected himself by refusing to play in Australia in the last few years where Warne performed better under immense pressure and in the big matches (he went through divorce at the same time as taking 40 wickets in the 2005 Ashes series). The ICC also changed the rules to accomodate Murali as he was clearly a chucker which will always leave a cloud over his career.. I like Murali, he is a great bowler, but he isnt the same class as Warne. I hope the above clarifies why Warne is considered the greatest.
Posted by soul4real on (July 10 2009, 17:59 PM GMT)Why do people (Aussies and Poms mainly) insist on stating that Warne is 'the best spinner that has ever bowled' when a certain Mr Muralitharan beats him on every conceivable statistic. Infact KP himself who has played both bowlers stated that he found Murali harder to face. I know Warne was a great bowler but he was not quite the best in his field.
Posted by HundredPercentBarcelonista on (July 10 2009, 15:25 PM GMT)Warne hasn't won anything as the tournament hasn't reached the pay-out stage yet. He played last year as well and missed that stage by a whisker.
Posted by madrazr on (July 10 2009, 14:42 PM GMT)I saw the survivor list at WSOP the other day and told myself Shane cant be playing this year, its the Ashes year. The article proves me wrong. But poker is such these days, nothings bigger than WSOP
Posted by Hangover on (July 10 2009, 14:38 PM GMT)being one of the 5 best cricketers of the century what more can u ask from the king of spin bowling. though murli has 1200+ wickets, and is a great spiner, the best spin bowl ever bowled is still of warne's; Shane is a tru warning by name and by bowling; he will be missed in the ashes 2 come, and by aussies... and not just by aussies but the cricket fans