The wife of the Australian cricketer serving a 12-month ban for the infamous ball-tampering scandal tells Lizzie Wilson about past mistakes and how, just when she thought she’d hit rock bottom, life sent another blow.
Stripped bare, broken and humiliated, Candice Warner stared at the big screen, feeling there could not be a more gut-wrenchingly low point in her life. It was March 10, and before a sell-out crowd of 19,000 and a global TV audience of millions, the former iron woman champion and wife of Australian cricketer Dave Warner felt her knees buckle, terrified she might collapse.
Live coverage from Day One of the second test between Australia and South Africa in Port Elizabeth had shifted its focus to a rowdy bunch of fans wearing masks of New Zealand rugby legend, Sonny Bill Williams. For the heartless pranksters, it was just a cheap shot, a bit of fun. Normally resilient, the mum-of-two didn’t see the funny side. Candice describes the moment when she crumbled, crushed by their cruel attempt to publicly disgrace her for an infamous drunken encounter with Sonny Bill back in 2007 in Sydney.
“I felt like a dirty, horrible person – it was like I cracked in half. It was a deliberate and very personal attack and I felt so ashamed of my past. People were staring and pointing at me, but I had to put on a brave face for our girls.
“I was completely exposed. I’d become an unwanted distraction. I saw myself on the big screen, the victim of a sick prank, and without notice, rock bottom hit me like a brick. Nothing could have prepared me for what was about to happen.”
In this exclusive and often intimate interview, Candice, 33, speaks openly about the moment she learnt of the infamous March 24 ball-tampering incident, about what really went on behind the scenes, and for the first time, she reveals her heartbreaking news: that the Warners suffered a tragic miscarriage in the aftermath of cricket’s cheating scandal.
Esta historia es de la edición June 2018 de Australian Women’s Weekly NZ.
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Esta historia es de la edición June 2018 de Australian Women’s Weekly NZ.
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