Australia's most consistent cricketer and new vice captain is incredibly forthright in a mid-career biography chock full of surprises.
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"There's nothing more we can do for you. Maybe it's time you gave up bowling. Concentrate on your batting."�September 2007
For Shane Watson, this was a body blow, even more devastating than the injuries that had stalled his promising career. It felt like the end of his boyhood dreams of being Australia's number
one all-rounder. He was shattered. He might never wear the Baggy Green again, even as a batsman. With so many talented young players available, he was losing the weapon that made him stand
out from the crowd. Back in February 2002, at the age of 20, Shane had been on a plane bound for South Africa with all his idols��he Waugh brothers, Glenn McGrath, and Shane Warne. He was
only among the reserve players, but was already being hailed as the best up-and-coming all-rounder in the country. Yet in the next four years he sustained so many injuries so frequently that
almost everybody lost faith in him. But, even through the darkest of days, he never lost belief in himself. Fast forward to March 2011. Shane is vice captain of the Australian Test and
One-Day teams, and has become an opening batsman of prodigious talent, a reflexive catcher at first slip and a bowler who rarely fails to take wickets. To many observers, he has become his
nation's most valuable player and surely the first name on the team sheet in all forms of the game. Here is his compelling and inspiring account of his journey from great potential to deep
despair and then personal triumph.