It’s time to fondly remember Shane Warne’s greatness.
Nothing more great than his ‘Ball of the century’
A quick historical look back of that great delivery
It’s 1993. Australia is visiting England for the Ashes. Warne is just a 11 test old newbie….
First test at Old Trafford. A pitch that generally supports spin. Even England played 2 spinners. But Australia went with a full seam attack with just the newbie spinner Warne in the team. Still an era where pace was ace.
England won the toss and bowled first. Aus made 289..
In reply England started well. Gooch and Mike Gatting at the crease. Gatting was well known as a great player of spin. But the Aussie captain Allan Border brought on Warne
Warne started with those lazy few steps and rolled his arm over ..
The ball started straight down the pitch but rapidly drifted to the right as seen in replays moving several inches outside the leg stump
Gatting brought his left leg forward as a typical defense to rebound the ball
However the ball fell on a footmark & the friction increased..
Causing it to turn far more than expected and pass Gatting to hit the top of off stump. Gatting stared at the pitch for several seconds.
Gatting in shock and Healy I’m surprised celebration became an iconic photo across the world..
The wicket was start of the many things.. Australia won the match as Warne picked 8 wickets in the game.. And then went on to win the Ashes 4-1 with Warne being the man of the series.
A legend was born.
It kickstarted the dominance of Australia through the next 2 decades with Warne being the prime architect behind it
And the cricket world which looked Upto pace for Spectacles slowly fell into the magic of Warne’s loopy leg spin
Thanks for the great memories. Farewell legend🙏🏻
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Ashoka lived 2300 yrs ago & left us many stories of his time in his rock edicts. But until the 18C, India had all but forgotten Ashoka. Until a few Britishers helped us rediscover him
How did we rediscover Ashoka & our ancient history?
A story that deserves a Netflix series 🧵
Ashoka, as we have read & know, was a great Mauryan emperor who ruled a large part of India in 3rdC BCE & most famously converted to Buddhism
He left a lot of his philosophies as edicts on pillars, rocks, cave walls in Prakrit language which was written a script called 'Brahmi'
Brahmi was the script then used to write ancient languages like Prakrit, Sanskrit &Tamil. But as more scripts emerged over the next few centuries, Brahmi slowly got lost by 5thC
With that, knowledge of Ashoka, Buddha etc was also fully lost. India moved on forgetting its history
After more than 200 years of Colonial rule, on this day Feb 28th of 1948, the last regiment of the British army left India via the Gateway of India in Mumbai.
A History Images thread for you 🧵
The final regiment to leave was the 'Somerset Light Infantry regiment'
They marched with a ceremonial farewell parade through the streets of South Mumbai
This is a story of an accidental discovery in science that has changed the world in the last 100 years.
A story of luck, foolishness and human endeavor that eventually led to the Nuclear bomb.
The story of Radioactivity💥💥
A fascinating Sunday Science History for you 🧵
The year was 1896. X-rays had been recently discovered. Light rays which were invisible but can go pass opaque objects like human skin greatly interested all scientists
French scientist Henri Becquerel wanted to research whether flourescent materials were emitting X rays as well
His chosen flourescent salt was Uranium!
Uranium was already a popular element which could take in light on exposure and then glow in the dark. People even used it in decorative kitchenware set as a luxury item!
Do you know there existed a piece of India within Bangladesh within India within Bangladesh?🤯🤯
This is the story of how some historical laziness led to a weirder geography for our country.
An interesting midweek story for you 🧵
1/n
An 'Enclave' is a geographical territory of a country/state that is entirely surrounded by the territory of another country.
During the partition of 1947, Cooch Behar district in West Bengal and Rangpur in East Pakistan ended up with hundreds of enclaves on either side
2/n
The folk history of how these small enclaves came to be is that the Rajas of Cooch Behar & Rangpur traded them hastily as stakes in gambling leading to this weirdness😃
The more reliable story is that the war of 1713 between Behar & Mughals ended without deciding on borders