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"F*** you, mate. We're going to beat ya," Shane Warne's response to Saleem Malik's bribe offer
Shane Warne's documentary coming up soon - should be interesting
==
Australian cricket legend Shane Warne has revealed he was once offered $276,000 to deliberately bowl poorly when touring Pakistan - but he sensationally refused the bribe.
In Warne's new documentary, Shane, the champion leg-spinner, 52, recalled how the night before day five of a 1994 Test he was summoned to the room of Pakistan captain Saleem Malik.
The match was evenly poised in Karachi, with the hosts requiring 160 runs to win while Australia needed seven wickets on a turning pitch.
After arriving at Malik's hotel room, Warne sat down and was stunned to hear what the disgraced skipper had to say.
'He (Mailk) goes 'Well we can't lose... you don't understand what happens when we lose in Pakistan,' Warne said.
'Our houses will get burnt down, our family's houses will get burnt down'.
Warne then claims Malik offered himself and fellow Aussie spinner Tim May US$200,000 ($AUD276,000) to not take any wickets on day five.
'I don't really know what to say,' Warne said. 'I just sort of sat there, stunned. And then I go, 'F*** you, mate. We're going to beat ya'.'
Warne and Malik haven't spoken since, with the former golden boy of Pakistan cricket banned from the sport for life in 2000 due to match-fixing.
'When you talk about match-fixing now, people hope it doesn't go on,' Warne told news.com.au.
'Back in that time, 30 years ago, there was no talk about it. 'When he (Malik) offered me that, it was a bit like, 'What the hell?' I was blown away, I didn't know anything about it.
'It was a significant amount of money.'
At the time, Warne's annual cricket salary was between $25,000 and $30,000.
Soon after his bombshell meeting with Mailk, Warne then spoke with May, captain Mark Taylor and national coach Bob Simpson, who informed match referee John Reid.
Warne was enraged when Pakistan ended up winning the Test by one wicket thanks to a heroic stand between Inzamam-ul-Haq and No. 11 Mushtaq Ahmed.
The pair combined for an unbeaten 57-run partnership to steer Pakistan towards a remarkable one-wicket triumph.
At the post-game ceremony, Warne locked eyes with Malik, who 'sat there with this smug look on his face as if to say, you should have taken the cash.'
Post cricket has been kind to Warne, who was once engaged to actress Liz Hurley.
He is a commentator for Fox Sports, plays in poker tournaments across the world and even launched a highly successful alcohol gin label, SevenZeroEight.
Warne retired from Test cricket in 2007 with 708 wickets to his name and a reputation as one of the game's greatest ever players.
Shane is now screening for a limited time in Australian cinemas nationally, before being streamed on Amazon Prime Video from January 25.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...Warne-opens-moment-offered-276-000-BRIBE.html
Shane Warne's documentary coming up soon - should be interesting
==
Australian cricket legend Shane Warne has revealed he was once offered $276,000 to deliberately bowl poorly when touring Pakistan - but he sensationally refused the bribe.
In Warne's new documentary, Shane, the champion leg-spinner, 52, recalled how the night before day five of a 1994 Test he was summoned to the room of Pakistan captain Saleem Malik.
The match was evenly poised in Karachi, with the hosts requiring 160 runs to win while Australia needed seven wickets on a turning pitch.
After arriving at Malik's hotel room, Warne sat down and was stunned to hear what the disgraced skipper had to say.
'He (Mailk) goes 'Well we can't lose... you don't understand what happens when we lose in Pakistan,' Warne said.
'Our houses will get burnt down, our family's houses will get burnt down'.
Warne then claims Malik offered himself and fellow Aussie spinner Tim May US$200,000 ($AUD276,000) to not take any wickets on day five.
'I don't really know what to say,' Warne said. 'I just sort of sat there, stunned. And then I go, 'F*** you, mate. We're going to beat ya'.'
Warne and Malik haven't spoken since, with the former golden boy of Pakistan cricket banned from the sport for life in 2000 due to match-fixing.
'When you talk about match-fixing now, people hope it doesn't go on,' Warne told news.com.au.
'Back in that time, 30 years ago, there was no talk about it. 'When he (Malik) offered me that, it was a bit like, 'What the hell?' I was blown away, I didn't know anything about it.
'It was a significant amount of money.'
At the time, Warne's annual cricket salary was between $25,000 and $30,000.
Soon after his bombshell meeting with Mailk, Warne then spoke with May, captain Mark Taylor and national coach Bob Simpson, who informed match referee John Reid.
Warne was enraged when Pakistan ended up winning the Test by one wicket thanks to a heroic stand between Inzamam-ul-Haq and No. 11 Mushtaq Ahmed.
The pair combined for an unbeaten 57-run partnership to steer Pakistan towards a remarkable one-wicket triumph.
At the post-game ceremony, Warne locked eyes with Malik, who 'sat there with this smug look on his face as if to say, you should have taken the cash.'
Post cricket has been kind to Warne, who was once engaged to actress Liz Hurley.
He is a commentator for Fox Sports, plays in poker tournaments across the world and even launched a highly successful alcohol gin label, SevenZeroEight.
Warne retired from Test cricket in 2007 with 708 wickets to his name and a reputation as one of the game's greatest ever players.
Shane is now screening for a limited time in Australian cinemas nationally, before being streamed on Amazon Prime Video from January 25.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...Warne-opens-moment-offered-276-000-BRIBE.html