Controversial Pakistan Player’s Tweet On Warne’s Demise Went Ridiculously Wrong!!

- Amir
- Shane Warne
By Dhiwaharan
Mohammad Amir, former Pakistan player who got banned by International cricket council for involving in spot fixing, uploaded a tweet in his official twitter handle on 4th of March to express his grief over the demise of legendary Australian spinner Shane Warne. However, the former cricketer’s tweet went wrong as he missed to put a full stop between two sentences in his tweet which completely changed the context of the his tweet.
Amir wrote “shocked to hear that he was legend of the game and equally a good person . RIP LEGEND 🙏 😔” instead of keeping a full stop between “That” and “He”.
Check out his tweet below :
shocked to hear that he was legend of the game and equally a good person .
RIP LEGEND 🙏 😔 pic.twitter.com/bv9z0RojyT— Mohammad Amir (@iamamirofficial) March 4, 2022
The tweet garnered wide reach in no time with humongous number of reactions from online users schooling the former cricketer over how to phrase a sentence in English language. In the meantime, a set of other fans defended him saying that the cricketer’s intentions were true and slammed those who were making fun of him.
“Why is his being legend and good person a shock to you? Please edit your tweet to convey what you actually mean” a fan said whereas another one wrote “His intentions was not wrong this time . This is just typing mistake or maybe one less English”
Check out some of the reactions below :
Your English teacher ?? pic.twitter.com/n6sIrp9IKF
— V (@unfunyguy) March 5, 2022
Why is his being legend and good person a shock to you? Please edit your tweet to convey what you actually mean.
— Gowhar Nazki (@GowharNazki) March 4, 2022
His intentions was not wrong this time . This is just typing mistake or maybe one less English.
— SAKSHAM GARG (@sakshamgarg100) March 4, 2022
Should have inserted a comma ( , ) here 😑 pic.twitter.com/hnkMR6tyGA
— RDK𓃵 🇮🇳 (@Goatcheeku_18) March 4, 2022
Shane warne from the Heaven pic.twitter.com/sn2x1sDRSM
— Gareeboo (@GareeboOP) March 5, 2022
Le English right now 😭 pic.twitter.com/0pI32UDpDC
— Karna Mehta (@kannymehta) March 5, 2022
Le English right now 😭 pic.twitter.com/0pI32UDpDC
— Karna Mehta (@kannymehta) March 5, 2022
We can understand yr emotions. Just a typing error here. RIP 🌹
— Diwakar¹⁸ (@diwakarkumar47) March 4, 2022
Don’t worry about the language, His intentions are pure. ❤️
— 👑 (@Viraaaaaaaaat) March 4, 2022
When Umar Akmal is your best friend👇🏻 https://t.co/rsUlxUAtBA
— Rais Pathan (@PathanRaisKhan) March 5, 2022
It’s a condolence. His words conveyed the emotion and the SINCERITY, even without punctuations. We get what he’s trying to say, that’s all that matters. All the Shakespeare wannabes making fun of him for his English, are looking very petty and small. https://t.co/hn7F1JTSM3
— Hades (@Russetlane) March 5, 2022
FIX this english problem @iamamirofficial
Oh sorry….You should not even try to FIX
FIXING seems to mean something else to you #Fixing#Pakistan#ShaneWarne https://t.co/nnpezfc9T8
— RAVEN (@denverguy217) March 5, 2022
Heartfelt message with a punctuation error >> Essay messages by PR agencies https://t.co/ppM3NEsQHU
— Umberla(☂️) (@KudaiTweets) March 5, 2022
Oxford graduates trolling him in QT’s just for a punctuation mistake 🤦 https://t.co/fdnGhjdtSw
— Jonas (@lvdkbl) March 5, 2022
52 year old Shane Warne died due to a suspected heart attack. “Shane Warne was found unresponsive in his Villa and despite the best efforts of medical staff, he could not be revived” management of Warne confirmed in a statement to Australian media outlet Fox Sports.
“The family requests privacy at this time and will provide further in due course” the statement further added. The cricketer died in Thailand, according to reports. Fondly called as “Warnie” by his fans and colleagues, Shane made his test debut at the SCG in the year 1992 and immediately gained international attention with his ball of the century which is being remembered and will be remembered forever.
Shane Warne was arguably the greatest leg spinner of all time, with a tally of 708 test wickets. He also picked 293 one day international wickets and made more than 300 International appearances for Australia across all the formats.