There's a Warne-shaped hole in this Ashes

For three decades one man was an unmissable presence at England-Australia series, as player and then commentator. No longer

Andrew McGlashan13-Jun-2023Whatever happens during the men’s Ashes series it will be notable for a significant absence. For the first time in 30 years Shane Warne will not be involved either on or off the field, although his legacy will never be far away.Roughly half of those years were spent with ball in hand, mesmerising and tormenting a generation of England batters. That period was bookended by two of his most famous moments: the delivery to Mike Gatting at Old Trafford in 1993 that saw the legend born, then the one he spun between Andrew Strauss’ bat and pad for his 700th in front of his home crowd at the MCG, not long after conjuring the miracle in Adelaide.He bowed out of Test cricket a few days later, in Sydney – the ground where his career had begun with 1 for 150 against India. That 2007 SCG match was a relatively quiet game with the ball for Warne (two wickets) although he did briefly threaten to go out with a century before being stumped for 71. A Test hundred was one of the few things to elude Warne, although only by one run and a missed no-ball.Related

  • In praise of Shane Warne, cricketing genius

  • What Shane Warne's greatest deliveries tell us

  • Warne's magic was made for television

  • Shane Warne gave us so much and he had so much more to give

  • Shane Warne Stand unveiled as MCG crowd bids their hero an emotional farewell

The on-field career brought to a close (although there was still the occasional story about him being lured out of retirement for another Ashes tilt), Warne became a presence in commentary boxes on both sides of the world, even if his appearance during the 2009 series in England was delayed a Test by a poker tournament in Las Vegas – which was entirely fitting of the man. Last year, shortly after his death, the Sky Sports commentary studio at Lord’s was named in his honour. Warne had a brilliant cricket mind and he did some of his best work with Sky, where they managed to balance mateship, banter and tactical analysis.During the 2013 Ashes they filmed one of their masterclass series with Warne in the indoor nets in Durham, where he bowled to Strauss and Nasser Hussain under the expert anchoring of Ian Ward. The segment remains available online and makes for viewing that is as compelling now on Warne’s brilliance as a bowler as it was then. Occasionally he would be over the top, but when Warne talked – or demonstrated – legspin, there was nothing better.Did I entertain you? Warne bows out of Test cricket in Sydney, 2007•Ezra Shaw/Getty ImagesOf course, that all came from what he had achieved on the field. To suggest Warne’s career was just about the Ashes would be grossly incorrect, but the rivalry played an integral part and was often where he produced his best, beginning with a single delivery forever etched in the game’s history.”Thirty years on, Warne is gone, but his signature feat and its impact abide,” Gideon Haigh wrote in this year’s . “One of the most remarkable features of the Ball of the Century is that nobody had imagined such a notion until it happened. We were seven years from the new millennium before it was proposed that a single delivery could stand out from everything before it. Baseball had its Shot Heard Round the World, football its Hand of God. But cricket had never so isolated, analysed, celebrated or fetishised a single moment.”After that unforgettable Ashes start, he would finish with 195 wickets at 23.25 in 36 Tests against England, comfortably the most in the rivalry (the fact that Glenn McGrath is third on that list is a reminder of Australia’s dominance in that era). There would have been potentially another six Tests to add if not for injury in 1998-99, where he only played in Sydney, and then 2002-03, where he missed the final two.