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The 'brutal' week in a hotel room that changed Shane Warne forever
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Published: 04:06 BST, 8 March 2022 | Updated: 07:44 BST, 8 March 2022
Horrific injuries Shane Warne suffered as a six year bizarrely helped him become the world's best leg spinner.
Talking on the new Prime Amazon documentary 'Shane', the cricketing legend said he believed that pulling himself around by his wrists after breaking both legs as a kid was one of the secrets of his success.
And it was his father Keith's ingenuity that saw Shane as a pre-schooler develop the sort of strength and flexibility which would later secure his renowned victories as a test cricketer.  
'From memory, I think I was six, maybe seven, I was really young,' Warne told EQ Media Group for the documentary released just seven weeks before the 52-year-old's death from a suspected heart attack last weekend in Koh Samui, Thailand .
'I think I was going through those concrete cylinder things in kindergarten and I remember (being) hunched over in that and someone jumped on my back and I ended up breaking both my legs.
Shane Warne on the trolley (above) built for him by father Keith after he broke both legs in kindergarten and had to pull himself around, strengthening the future leg spinner's wrists
Shane Warne and his father Keith (above in 2002, holding a memento of his 100th Test Match) has revealed how his dad turned his catastrophic double leg fracture as a young boy into a positive
Warne (above in the 2007 Sydney Ashes Test) has revealed in the new documentary 'Shane' that pulling himself around on the trolley for six months strengthened his wrists 'at a young age, because leg spin bowling - you do use your wrist for everything'
'So my dad made me a trolley and I had plaster to my ankles and I had to use my hands to get around for a good six months, even longer because I couldn't walk.
'I have got quite big hands and big wrists, so I think it did help me to get around and strengthen those wrists at a young age because leg spin bowling you do use your wrist at everything.
'So I do think that played a big part.'
As kids growing up in Melbourne, Shane and his brother Jason would accompany their mother Brigitte when she travelled to the southeastern suburb of Sandringham to clean the house of Bob and Hazel Hawke in the 1970s.
Future prime minister Hawke at the time headed the Australian Council of Trade Unions, was federal president of the Labor Party and paid for a tennis court to be built at the house.
Shane Warne would later credit Hawke with giving him some of his first lessons in the art of leg spin bowling on the tennis court.
Warne (above in action in the second 2004 Test against Pakistan) later revealed on field he was 'a man on a mission' who would 'take no prisoners' and that he wouldn't have wanted to play against someone like himself
Shane Warne (above left, In Melbourne in 2006 and right at Old Trafford in 1997) said his attitude was to 'intimidate' opponents and could be 'nasty' on field
While commentating on the fifth Test in the 2017-2018 Ashes series for Channel 9, Warne remarked about Bob Hawke, who was in the crowd, 'I've known Bob Hawke for 40 years. He taught me how to bowl some leg spinners on his tennis court'.  
In the Amazon documentary, Warne also talked about his cut throat attitude on the field and the motivation to retire in 2007, to make up for the years he had missed spending time with his family.
He said that apart from the necessary strength he had built up for delivering leg spin, it was a matter of attitude towards opponents.
Warne took 708 Test wickets in 154 matches of an extraordinary career. 
As a kid in Melbourne, Shane Warne broke both legs and father Keith (above, right) made him a trolley which helped develop his famous spin bowling wrists while mother Brigitte (left) took him to Bob Hawke's house where he learnt leg spin bowling while she cleaned
Shane Warne has revealed in the new Amazon documentary that he had a ruthless attitude to spin bowling and opponents and a strength on field (above, in the 2021 Big Bash match at the Gabba) was 'I can intimidate people'
He described his so-called 'ball of the century' - dismissing England batsman Mike Gatting with the perfect leg break delivery off the first ball bowled in the 1993 Ashes at Old Trafford - as 'a fluke'.
 Widely regarded as the moment leg-spin bowling became fashionable again, it was later said by Gatting that he 'knew it was a leg break but I didn't expect it to spin that much'.
Warne said he had a 'nasty' streak which helped him succeed, saying 'one of my strengths on the field is I can intimidate people'.
'Whether it be a word or a bit of silence, whether it was to stand at the top mark and spin the ball, whether it was to eyeball someone, the batsman at the other end, whether there was a little sledge here or there,' he told the documentary's producers.
'Whatever it was. I was a man on a mission. I wasn't taking any prisoners. I wouldn't have liked to play against me. I was nasty.'
Part of making the documentary was 'to set the record straight on a couple of things, why he retired and how important his family were to him,' EQ producer Brendan Dahill has revealed since Warne's death. 
Shane Warne also said in the documentary that although he was 'selfish' about his sport, when he quit Test cricket to spend more time which children (above) Brooke, Summer and Jackson and 'I bloody loved it'
Warne said after walking away from Test cricket in 2007, he 'wanted to be a full time dad. My children (Brooke, Summer and Jackson, pictured above in 2020) were 10, eight and six and I wanted to be with them more. I'd missed so much of their life'
Warne admitted on camera he had put cricket ahead of his family, and that had contributed to the breakdown of his marriage to Simone Callahan, the mother of their three children, Brooke, Jackson and Summer.
But he had tried to make up for it by retiring from Test cricket in 2007 when he was still near the top of his game and being chosen by Australian selectors.
The following year, Warne would be appointed captain/coach of the Rajasthan Royals in the inaugural Indian Premier League, winning the tournament and investing in the team in a three per cent stake which is worth at least $10 million today.
'I can't shy away that I put my family second to try and be the best I possibly could for Australia and be the best player I could,' Warne said on the documentary.
'I was emotionally invested and I was always present with my family when I was with them. But when I was with cricket, cricket was my priority, and cricket was my focus.
'To be as good as I was, I had to be selfish at times. And most of the time I was.
The year after retiring from Test cricket, Warne was appointed captain/coach of the Rajasthan Royals (above) in the inaugural Indian Premier League, winning the tournament and investing in a three per cent stake which is worth at least $10 million today
An ambulance carrying the body of Shane Warne leaves a southern Thailand hospital for Suvarnabhumi International Airport to be flown back to Australia
'So the real reason I retired and the major reason was my children were 10, eight and six and I wanted to be with them more. I'd missed so much of their life.
'I wanted to cut the lunches. I wanted to walk them to school. I wanted to watch them play sport. 
'I just wanted to be more involved rather than part time. I wanted to be full time. I wanted to be a full time dad and that was the major reason I retired. And I bloody loved it.
'I don't pretend to be the perfect person. I've got lots of faults.
'I like loud music, I smoked, I drank, and I bowled a bit of leg spin. That was sort of me. I don't have any regrets.'
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Published by Associated Newspapers Ltd
Part of the Daily Mail, The Mail on Sunday & Metro Media Group

Model 'beaten and tortured by husband who filmed shocking abuse and sent videos to friends'
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Berenger Rose claims she was abused by her husband Shane Cuthbert
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WARNING: Contains distressing images. Berenger Rose was allegedly abused by Shaun Cuthbert and has released footage of 'attacks'
A glamour model who was allegedly beaten and tortured by her husband has released disturbing footage which purports to show his abuse.
Berenger Rose can be seen covered in painful black and blue bruises and cowering from Shane Cuthbert, 25, as she begs him to stop hurting her.
The 27-year-old from Sydney says Cuthbert would film the alleged attacks for his own entertainment and even sent them to friends to brag.
Ms Rose, who has appeared on the cover of Zoo magazine , says her husband regularly beat her with wooden poles and tortured her with a cheese grater.
She told A Current Affair : "Every day, I thought 'I am going to be that next victim. I am going to be that next woman that gets killed'."
"He would call me crazy. Tell me that I was the one abusing him and I believed him. I thought I was the one with the problem.
"He would throw my head into walls, he would bash my head in the side of my bed."
The couple met on social media when Cuthbert started following Ms Rose on Instagram and starting messaging her.
Initially she says he was 'sweet and charming' and within a month he had moved into her home before proposing four weeks later.
But it was after getting married Ms Rose says Cuthbert insisted they move to a remote town in northern Queensland, away from her family and friends and she claims that since then she has lived in isolation.
Ms Rose says the alleged abuse began with a slap across the face which then escalated into her head being thrown into a brick wall.
He began controlling her movements, tracking her phone and not allowing her to leave the house - meaning she missed out on modelling work, says Ms Rose.
At one point he even barricaded her into their home with a pile of furniture so she couldn't leave.
She says she had no privacy and couldn't even close the bathroom door when she went to the toilet.
She also lost a baby and described sitting on the floor of her shower while she miscarried as Cuthbert sat out drinking.
Ms Rose says she was knocked unconscious on a number of occasions but wasn't allowed to visit the hospital.
But despite the alleged beatings Ms Rose says she didn't go to police.
According to A Current Affair, Cuthbert had previously featured on their television programme as an 'out of control child' whose parents were struggling with his Attention Deficit Disorder (ADD) diagnosis.
Cuthbert is in police custody and expected to face a string of charges in Mackay Magistrates Court on March 16, it's reported.
Police say he has been charged over making and detonating an explosive device on Christmas Eve, as well as one count of willful damage and one count of contravening a domestic violence order which occurred on February 29.
It is not known if Ms Rose, who has since split from Cuthbert, has spoken to police about the allegations she made against her husband on the programme.
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Posted: Apr 14, 2015 / 12:10 PM EDT

Updated: Apr 16, 2015 / 08:33 PM EDT

Posted: Apr 14, 2015 / 12:10 PM EDT

Updated: Apr 16, 2015 / 08:33 PM EDT
BAY COUNTY, Fla. (PIX11) – Shocking cell phone footage of the alleged gang rape of a teen in Panama City Beach Florida shows crowds of spring break revelers steps from the victim, but none of them intervening. The video, found during the investigation of a related crime, has already led to two arrests , and a local sheriff is vowing more.
“It’s probably one of the most disgusting, sickening things I’ve seen on a Panama City beach,” said Bay County Sheriff Frank McKeithen. “This is not the first video we’ve recovered, it’s not the second video, it’s not the third video (and) there’s a number of videos with things similar to this. I can only imagine how many we haven’t recovered.”
Police have released a small portion of the video, which is so graphic it had to be blurred. The footage shows the 19-year-old woman, apparently incapacitated, in a chair on the beach behind the Spinnaker Beach Club, being sexually assaulted by one man after another in broad daylight, according to police. As the attacks occur, the suspects can be heard joking about how “she isn’t going to know,” as they ignore her feeble attempts to push them off her, according to the Panama City News Herald. McKeithen likened the attack to “wild animals preying on a carcass laying in the woods.”
Police tracked down the victim, but she told detectives she didn’t remember
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