NewsBite

Paramedic details Shane Warne’s final moments

Paramedics have revealed how they battled in vain to revive Shane Warne as his friends shouted: “Come on, Shane.”.

Warne’s children, Jackson and Brooke, are in shock at the loss of their father. Picture: Jason Edwards
Warne’s children, Jackson and Brooke, are in shock at the loss of their father. Picture: Jason Edwards

Paramedics have revealed how they battled in vain to revive cricket legend Shane Warne as his friends shouted: “Come on, Shane.”.

His friends also gave CPR after finding tragic Shane, 52, unresponsive in his Thai villa.

Aussie hero Warne, 52, died soon after ordering a new suit and calling two Thai masseuses to his holiday villa, police said on Saturday.

A TV was showing the Australia-Pakistan Test match as pals tried desperately to resuscitate him after a suspected heart attack.

Warne had suffered chest pains before leaving his homeland for the Thai island of Ko Samui for a week’s holiday with friends.

His manager also revealed the star had just started a three-month break from his hectic schedule.

He said: “Shane’s friends were already trying to bring him back to life.

“I took over doing CPR while we waited for an ambulance.

“They were desperate. I think one was crying. They were really stressed and panicked.

He said: “Shane’s friends were already trying to bring him back to life.

“I took over doing CPR while we waited for an ambulance.

“They were desperate. I think one was crying. They were really stressed and panicked.

“They kept trying to wake him and I heard someone saying, ‘Come on, Shane. Come on, Shane’.

Shane Warne’s body is moved from Koh Samui Hospital mortuary on Sunday. Picture AFP
Shane Warne’s body is moved from Koh Samui Hospital mortuary on Sunday. Picture AFP

“I could see they were all shocked and I just tried to concentrate and do my best.

“There were about four or five other people in the room. All men, there were no women.

“The villa was clean and I didn’t see any beer or cigarettes inside.

“There was nothing unusual that made me think they’d been partying. I didn’t know when I arrived that it was Shane Warne. But I know who he is, he’s a star.

“I did my best for him and gave all my energy. I’m so sorry that I couldn’t help him.”

Thai cops yesterday released pictures of the room — as forensics teams continued their work at the £2,000-a-night villa.

Sky Sports pundit and dad-of-three Warne had earlier visited a tailor to have a suit cut, said Police chief Yuttana Sirisombat.

He added: “He called the girl to massage. It was just massage.

“He didn’t die because of the massage. He wasn’t well.”

Colonel Sirisombat said Warne’s family had told police the star was suffering health problems before jetting off.

He explained: “He had asthma and had seen a doctor about his heart. We learned from his family that he had experienced chest pains when he was back home.”

Police confirmed no alcohol or drugs were found in the room.

Officers yesterday interviewed Warne’s friends for two hours.

They are treating the death as non-suspicious and have ruled out foul play.

There were no signs of a break-in or violent argument in the villa room. Warne’s body is due to be transferred to Surat Thani on the Thai mainland.

Authorities said it would have to test negative for Covid before the autopsy which is due today.

Colonel Sirisombat said investigators were examining whether blood stains in the room were caused by attempts to revive him, or another medical issue.

He went on: “So far, no suspicious issue found from the investigations.

“However, the blood stain was seen on the floor which the friends told police was the consequence of CPR practices.

Cans of baked beans and beer at the base of Shane Warne’s statue outside the MCG on Sunday. Picture: AFP
Cans of baked beans and beer at the base of Shane Warne’s statue outside the MCG on Sunday. Picture: AFP

“Therefore, the investigators have to scrutinise it clearly before concluding the case and all assumptions still remain.”

Warne’s family — including his former wife Simone Callahan and their children Brooke, Summer and Jackson — were said to be in shock last night.

Warne, regarded as Test cricket’s greatest bowler with 708 wickets, had flown to Thailand on Thursday with friends including Andrew Neophitou, Gareth Edwards and John Dopere. Mr Neophitou, executive producer on the recently-released Amazon Prime film Shane about the star, had found Warne unresponsive late on Friday afternoon.

Warne’s pal and long-time manager James Erskine told Fox Sports in Australia: “Neo knocked on his door because Warnie is always on time.

“He said, ‘Come on you’re going to be late’ and then realised something was wrong.

“He turned him over and gave him CPR and mouth to mouth, which lasted about 20 minutes and then the ambulance came.

“They took him to the hospital, which was about a 20-minute drive and I got a phone call about 45 minutes later saying he had been pronounced dead.”

Mr Neophitou, thought to have been staying in the next-door room, said yesterday: “We just really want to get Shane home.”

Mr Erskine said that Warne had asked for time off before working as a commentator in England this summer. He was also due to coach London Spirit his team in The Hundred competition. Mr Erskine said: “Shane had sort of decided he was going to have three months off.

“He wanted a year off, and I said ‘There’s no way you can (do that) they would have forgotten you by a year’. So he decided to have three months off.

“And this was just the start of it, and they’d only arrived the day or night before.”

Womaniser Warne, often pictured with a drink and cigar, was known for partying hard off the pitch. But Mr Erskine insisted: “He didn’t drink much. Everyone thinks he’s a big boozer but he’s not.

“I sent him a crate of wine — ten years later it’s still there.

“He doesn’t drink, never took drugs, ever. He hated drugs so nothing untoward.

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

Warne was pronounced dead at the Thai International Hospital.

Shane Warne’s life was ‘cut short too soon’

His body was then moved to the Koh Samui Hospital, where it was yesterday in a mortuary.

Hospital director Dr Dulyakij Wittayajanyapong said: “The doctor informed me that the patient died before reaching the hospital but we continued with the use of a ventilator and CPR for another 45 minutes.”

He added: “The patient had no pulse or vital signs when found at the scene.

“I cannot say what caused the death but if the relatives have any questions they must have an autopsy performed.” Police said Warne and his pals had been booked into the villa until next Thursday, March 10.

In his last Instagram post, on Monday, Warne had revealed he was on a fitness kick — and posted a topless snap of himself from his playing days.

He said: “Operation Shred has started (10 days in) and the goal by July is to get back to this shape from a few years ago.”

Doctor Philippa Kaye said the traces of blood in Warne’s room could have stemmed from him having high blood pressure. Dr Kaye, currently appearing on ITV’s This Morning, added: “High blood pressure can cause nose bleeds.

“It is possible he might have had a sudden rise in blood pressure which can cause a heart attack.

“I’m not aware of heart attacks themselves causing a nose bleed.

“A big nose bleed will go down the back of the nose and into the mouth.”

She said injuries can be caused during the CPR process, such as broken ribs, but that would unlikely cause a nose bleed.

MCG looms as venue for Warne’s state funeral

The MCG has emerged as a leading contender to host the funeral of Shane Warne, after the cricket legend’s family accepted the Victorian Government’s offer of a state funeral.

For a funeral which could be attended by high profile sporting and entertainment celebrities from around the globe, it would be most fitting for the farewell to The King to be held at the coliseum where Warne achieved some of his most special moments.

News Corp understands the Melbourne Cricket Ground, with the Shane Warne statue out the front and the soon to be named S.K Warne Stand, is one of the venues under consideration to host the landmark event which will remember the life of an Australian icon.

Warne family accept off of state funeral

A state funeral will be held to remember Shane Warne.

“I’ve spoken with the Warne family again today and they have accepted my offer of a State Funeral to remember Shane,” Victorian Premier Daniel Andrews tweeted on Sunday.

“It will be an opportunity for Victorians to pay tribute to his contribution to his sport, to our state and the country.”

The Premier said details about the service will be finalised in the coming days.

Warne was on ‘extreme diet’

Shane Warne was on an extreme fitness and diet regime in the days before his sudden death in Thailand.

Determined to lose weight, the 52-year-old told friends he was fasting and not drinking water as part of the program to get back in shape.

Two weeks before his death he posted on Twitter an old image of himself looking buff and trim.

“Operation shred has started (10 days in) and the goal by July is get back to this shape from a few years ago,” he wrote. “Let’s go.”

Warne finished the message with hashtags: healthy, fitness, feel good Friday.

Never one to do anything by halves, he would go from periods where he exercised, dieted and rejected alcohol.

At other times he would consume double vodkas and red bulls when out for the night, smoke heavily and eat badly.

Friends said they never knew of him to use drugs.

Warne was out of shape in the summer and was working tirelessly through the Ashes and then the Big Bash for Fox Cricket.

He had a landing on the stairwell where he hid to smoke during the Adelaide Test match, one day somebody had written on the wall where he had his furtive puffs “Warnie’s spot”.

In February 2003 he received a 12-month ban from the game for using a diuretic which helps strip weight quickly from the body by removing excess fluids.

Sensitive about his weight, he once stormed out of an event to launch a wax image of himself at Madame Tussauds after a journalist quipped that the statue was a trimmer version of the man unveiling it.

Warne’s children are in ‘‘complete shock’’ at the Australian cricket great’s passing, describing the sudden death as a ‘bad dream’.

Warne’s long-time manager James Erskine, on Saturday, spoke to Warne’s three kids, Jackson, Brooke and Summer, as well as ex-wife Simone Callahan, and tragically described their emotional state.

“I think the three children are in complete shock,” Erskine said on Channel 9’s Today show.

“I spoke to them yesterday and … Jackson just said, ‘We expect him to walk in the door. This is like a bad dream’.”

Erskine said Callahan and Warne’s father Keith were naturally “shattered” at the shock death at just 52 from a heart attack.

Warne’s children, Jackson and Brooke, are in shock at the loss of their father. Picture: Jason Edwards
Warne’s children, Jackson and Brooke, are in shock at the loss of their father. Picture: Jason Edwards

“Like everybody, (Keith Warne is) just shattered. They can’t believe what’s happened,” Erskine added.

“I think that’s what happens when you have a sudden death and you’re not expecting.

“One minute the kids are talking to him every day, the next minute they can’t talk to him and they start thinking about he’s not going to be there for my 21st, he’s not going to take me down the aisle.

“Those things go through your head. They are having a much harder time than anybody really.”

Warne suffered the heart attack while on holiday in Koh Samui, where he had planned to get back into shape after a long summer covering the Ashes.

Erskine revealed Warne had a habit of attempting ‘ridiculous’ extreme diets, in a bid to drop weight.

“He did go on these ridiculous sort of diets, and he was just finished one, where he basically only ate fluids for 14 days and he’d done this three or four times,” Erskine said.

“It was a bit all or nothing. It was either white buns with butter and lasagne stuffed in the middle, or he would be having black and green juices.

“He obviously smoked most of his life (but) I don’t know, I think it was just a massive heart attack. That’s what I think’s happened.”

3.10pm: Horse to be raced in Warne’s memory

Jockey Ryan Maloney will wear a black armband on Wednesday when a horse which was part-owned by cricket legend Shane Warne carries a sentimental weight of punters’ money, writes Ben Dorries.

“I can’t believe Shane is no longer with us – the entire world is going to be on Sacred Oath at Ipswich on Wednesday,” part-owner Jarred Magnabosco, from Best Bloodstock, said.

Trainer David Vandyke has confirmed the three-year-old colt, who created national headlines before his debut last month when News Corp revealed SK Warne was in the ownership, would take his place in a 1500m Maiden Plate at Ipswich on Wednesday.

A horse part owned by Shane Warne races on Wednesday.
A horse part owned by Shane Warne races on Wednesday.

Glenn Munsie from the TAB said he expected Sacred Oath to be well backed given the Warne connection.

Munsie said that after cricket great Rod Marsh passed away last week, tote punters gravitated towards a horse called Marsh Lillie, which was much shorter on the tote than its $71 starting price in a race at Newcastle.

“Sentimental punters will want to be all over Sacred Oath on Wednesday when they realise it was Shane Warne’s horse, they will want to back it in memory of the great man,” Munsie said.

Group 1 winning jockey Maloney said it was only fitting he wear a black armband as a sign of respect.

“Warnie was one of my heroes growing up – him and Allan Border,” Maloney said.

“I just loved watching Warnie, he was just so flamboyant.”

Jockey Ryan Maloney after winning the 2020 Group 1 Australian Guineas on Alligator Blood. Picture: Getty Images.
Jockey Ryan Maloney after winning the 2020 Group 1 Australian Guineas on Alligator Blood. Picture: Getty Images.

A big betting drifter on debut from $2.15 favourite to $2.80 second pick at Doomben on February 16, Sacred Oath loomed up as the winner in the straight before finishing second behind a race-fit Tony Gollan-trainer galloper in a 1350m Handicap.

It was a game of poker that had sowed the seeds for Warne to join the ownership of Sacred Oath with his mate and former Hawthorn AFL premiership great Campbell Brown.

Brown is considering flying from Victoria to Queensland to be trackside at Ipswich when Sacred Oath races on Wednesday.

There are other big names in the ownership of Sacred Oath – Shane Jacobson (aka Kenny the dunny man) and prominent media man Hamish McLachlan are also part-owners.

AFL types in the horse include Sydney's Jake Lloyd, Port Adelaide’s Trent McKenzie and a syndicate of Fremantle players, including Joel Hamling, Luke Ryan, Brennan Cox, Darcy Tucker, Blake Acres, Brandon Matera and Michael Walters.

Sacred Oath is a son of Group 1 winner Sacred Falls and Vandyke has even thrown in a nomination for next month’s Group 1 Australian Derby at Randwick.

2.30pm: Fond memories of a ‘Brighton icon’

Warnie’s previous neighbours have remembered him as a “friendly guy” who would always stop and say hello.

Former neighbours Suzanne Rumble and son Ben Ronec, said the cricket star was “a great neighbour to have.”

“I used to always see him sitting in his garage with the door open playing poker,” said Ms Rumble.

“The amount of banter and camaraderie in that garage was amazing - and all ages, young and old. With his son, Jackson.”

Ms Rumble, labelling Shane a “Brighton icon,” recalled hearing a few parties over the years, and said the Warne household was always “full of fun.”

“I thought it was fabulous,” she added.

Mr Ronec, who was a few years older than Jackson at Brighton Grammar School, remembered Shane always being involved in his kids’ lives.

Shane Warne and his son Jackson Warne always had ‘the garage door open playing poker.’
Shane Warne and his son Jackson Warne always had ‘the garage door open playing poker.’

He said he and his mum regularly bumped into him at local sports games.

“He would always give us the time of day. He would always want to know what was going on,” said Ms Rumble.

“He was always smiling, always happy,” she added.

Jim, who lived a few houses down at another of Warnie’s Brighton homes, said Shane was “always friendly, always kind.”

He smiled as he remembered Shane’s attempts at three point turns being more like 7-point turns.

“He always waved, always took the time to say hello to his neighbours,” he said.

“We’re all very sad about his passing,” said another neighbour.

Brighton MP James Newbury, whose office is a few doors down from one of the former properties, also paid tribute to Shane on Saturday - remembering him as a family man and a cricket legend.

“He and his children are loved, especially by our sports clubs - He never said no to helping kids learn sport,” he said.

“Rest in peace legend.”

2pm: Warne’s body moved for autopsy

Shane Warne’s body is being transferred to a hospital for an autopsy.

The cricket legend’s remains were moved on a stretcher from a mortuary in Koh Samui and driven by car to Seatran ferry pier to get off the island.

His body, covered in a pink blanket and on an ambulance stretcher, was respectfully taken from the mortuary at the holiday island’s hospital shortly after midday AEDT.

Warne was to be taken to Suratthani Hospital on the Thai mainland, about 125km or three hours away from Koh Samui.

Royal Thai police said on Saturday night that Warne’s family had told them he had complained of chest pains before leaving for the island paradise this week.

There had been suggestions that any autopsy would be done in Australia, but police confirmed they had permission to perform the procedure in Thailand.

11:30am Warne loss ‘massive hit’ for sporting community

Melbourne United coach Dean Vickerman might be a silver fox now but, in his younger years, his hair took its cues from iconic cricket great Shane Warne.

United paid tribute to the legendary leg spinner Saturday night at John Cain Arena with a moment of silence before their win over Brisbane Bullets.

Speaking after the game, Vickerman said the loss of both Warne and wicketkeeping master Rod Marsh was a “massive hit” for the sporting community.

“I want to acknowledge the loss of Shane Warne, as a Victorian, as a person who absolutely adored what he did on the field and played with a passion and changed the game,” Vickerman said.

“There were a few blond tips in my hair back in the day because of Shane Warne.

“Shout out to the cricket community and to his family.”

Vickerman’s tribute was part of an outpouring of sadness and emotion from the sporting world after Warne suffered a heart attack while on holiday in Koh Samui, Thailand.

Add your comment to this story

To join the conversation, please Don't have an account? Register

Join the conversation, you are commenting as Logout

Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/sport/cricket/shane-warnes-manager-james-erskine-says-cricket-greats-kids-in-complete-shock-at-fathers-death/news-story/80589af3cdfa131e685fac609ba5a319