The 46-year-old, who played 26 Tests and 198 one-day internationals for Australia from 1998 to 2009, was involved in a single-car accident
Swashbuckling former all-rounder Andrew Symonds was killed in a car crash, Cricket Australia said Sunday, May 15, in another tragic blow for the sport after the recent deaths of fellow greats Shane Warne and Rod Marsh, a report in the Deccan Chronicle, says..
The 46-year-old, who played 26 Tests and 198 one-day internationals for Australia from 1998 to 2009, was involved in a single-car accident outside Townsville in Queensland state on Saturday, May 14 night.
Police said emergency services tried to revive the driver and sole occupant, but he died from his injuries after the car careered off the road and spun out of control.
Cricket Australia chairman Lachlan Henderson said in a statement: “Australian cricket has lost another of its very best,”
“Andrew was a generational talent who was instrumental in Australia’s success at World Cups and as part of Queensland’s rich cricket history.He was a cult figure to many who was treasured by his fans and friends,” he added.
Symonds’ fatal crash comes just months after the deaths of fellow Australian greats Warne and Marsh, who both died unexpectedly from heart attacks.
Former Australia captain Mark Taylor told Channel Nine. “Another tragic day for cricket. Unfortunately I’ve been here too often this year under these circumstances. I actually can’t quite believe it, to be honest,”
The larger-than-life Symonds was hugely popular, not only for his hard-hitting approach to the game but also for his easy-going personality.
He was considered one of the most skilled all-rounders Australian cricket has seen, bowling both off-spin and medium pace, while playing many match-winning hands with his explosive middle-order batting. He was also a top-rate fielder and was a key part of Australia’s back-to-back 50-over World Cups triumphs in 2003 and 2007.
In domestic cricket he played for Queensland for 17 seasons, while appearing for Gloucestershire, Kent, Lancashire and Surrey in the English County Championship and for Deccan Chargers and Mumbai Indians in the Indian Premier League.
Former Australian teammate Jason Gillespie tweeted ‘Utterly devastated, horrendous news to wake up to. We’re all gonna miss you mate.”
Another former teammate, who more recently commentated alongside Symonds at Fox Sports, Adam Gilchrist, wrote: “This really hurts,” while Pakistani fast bowler Shoaib Akhtar said he was “devastated”. Former England skipper Michael Vaughan said: “Simmo … this doesn’t feel real #RIP.”
Born in England with one parent of Afro-Caribbean descent, Symonds will also be remembered an infamous scandal that sent his cricketing career into a downward spiral.
He had accused India spinner Harbhajan Singh of calling him a “monkey” in Sydney’s 2008 New Year Test.
Singh, who denied any wrongdoing, was suspended for three matches. The ban was overturned when India threatened to quit the tour in a low point for India-Australia cricket relations.
The Australian player later revealed that was a crucial turning point in his life.
“From that moment on that was my downhill slide,” he recalled in 2018. “I started to drink heavily as a result of it and my life was starting to dissolve around me.”
His Cricket Australia contract was withdrawn in June 2009 after he was sent home from the World Twenty20 in England following the latest in a series of alcohol-related indiscretions.
Despite the animosity, Symonds and Harbhajan eventually made up and played together in the Indian Premier League, with the Australian forging a successful career as a respected television commentator after retiring.
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