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Champion allrounder Andrew Symonds dies in car accident

Two-time World Cup winner and much-loved member of Australian cricket tragically killed in a single-car crash outside Townsville

World cricket is mourning the shock loss of another Australian great after Test star and two-time World Cup winner Andrew Symonds was killed in a car crash in Queensland.

The 46-year-old "cult figure" was involved in a single-vehicle accident late on Saturday. He is survived by wife Laura and young children Chloe and Billy.

Queensland Police are investigating the crash, which occurred at Hervey Range, about 50km from Townsville.

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"Early information indicates shortly after 11pm the car was being driven on Hervey Range Road, near Alice River Bridge when it left the roadway and rolled," a police statement read.

"Emergency services attempted to revive the 46-year-old driver and sole occupant, however, he died of his injuries."

Symonds death comes barely two months after the death of leg-spin great Shane Warne at age 52 after a suspected heart attack in Thailand.

Cricket Australia chair Lachlan Henderson said: "Australian cricket has lost another of its very best. Andrew was a generational talent who was instrumental in Australia's success at World Cups and as part of Queensland's rich cricket history.

Image Id: 4EFC12296F334092946EC6F63ECB3A7D Image Caption: Symonds played 26 times in Baggy Green, scoring two hundreds // Getty

"He was a cult figure to many who was treasured by his fans and friends.

"On behalf of Australian cricket our deepest sympathies are with Andrew's family, team-mates, and friends."

Symonds played 26 Tests for Australia, scoring 1462 runs at 40.61 and picking up 24 wickets with his handy off-spin and medium-pace bowling.

His brilliant 162 not out against India in the 2008 Sydney Test helped Australia to a 122-run victory, but the game would later be mired in controversy over the Monkeygate affair.

Symonds accused Indian spinner Harbhajan Singh of calling him a "monkey", triggering a war of words between the two teams and a threat by India to return home after Singh was initially suspended for three games.

But it was in the white-ball arena where the man they called 'Roy' really excelled.

A crowd favourite in the short-form game, the big-hitting allrounder played 198 one-day internationals, clobbering 5088 runs and taking 133 wickets.

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The Queenslander, who was born in Birmingham but moved to Australia with his adoptive parents as a baby, was also a brilliant fielder, renowned for pulling off a spectacular run out or outrageous catch just when his team needed it.

Symonds was an integral part of Australia's Word Cup-winning campaigns in 2003 and 2007, performing with bat, ball and in the field.

His 143 against a Wasim Akram-led Pakistan in Australia's opening match of the 2003 tournament in Johannesburg announced his arrival to the cricket world.

The dreadlocked right-hander's match-winning knock came from just 125 deliveries and featured 18 fours and two sixes.

At the time it was the highest score by an Australian at a World Cup.

In the semi-final against Sri Lanka, Symonds came to the crease with his side struggling at 3-53.

He scored an undefeated 91 to help the defending champions reach 7-212, which proved too much for the Sri Lankans in a rain-affected match.

Ricky Ponting's men were easy victors over India in the final.

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Australia didn't need too many heroics from Symonds in the 2007 World Cup, cruising through the pool games and easily defeating Sri Lanka in the decider in Barbados.

Symonds finished his twin World Cup campaigns with two winners' medals, an average of 103, a strike rate of 93.29 and the adulation of fans around the world.

"I think it's the fear factor he puts into the opposition because he can clear the boundary on a regular basis," former Australian captain Ian Chappell said of Symonds.

"He is going to create some run outs for you. He'll take a blinding catch and he has been very, very tidy with the ball now for a long time."

The big-hitting right-hander was also a trailblazer in the T20 game, scoring a 34-ball hundred for Kent against Middlesex in 2004 to lay a marker for what could be achieved in the shortened format. It stood as T20 cricket's fastest hundred until broken by Chris Gayle in 2013, while only last week England captain Ben Stokes broke Symonds' world record of 16 sixes in a first-class innings, which the Australian had achieved as a 20-year-old for Gloucestershire in 1995.

Symonds played 102 first-class games for Queensland, 85 One-Day games and six T20 matches for the Bulls in a career that spanned 1993-94 to 2009-10. He was player of the match in the 2001-02 Pura Cup final and played in five domestic championship teams for Queensland.

Queensland Cricket Chair Chris Simpson, who played alongside Symonds for the Bulls, said the cricket community was again mourning the sudden loss of one of the game's most striking characters.

"On behalf of Queensland Cricket, we express our deepest sympathies to his family and will do whatever we can to assist them," he said.

"It is a shattering loss to those nearest to him, and his wide circle of friends which extend to all corners of the cricketing world.

"His untimely passing will also resonate deeply with the many fans who thrilled to his efforts with bat, ball and in the field. He stood out for his skill, courage and determination, and the fans who saw him at his best will never forget his impact on a game."

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"We are all hurting and will miss him greatly. His former teammates will remember his loyalty to the playing group and recall the fun times with great fondness, and sorrow that he is gone.

"He loved Queensland and its outdoor lifestyle and valued and respected the opportunities he had as a youngster growing up in North Queensland that enabled him to go onto represent his state and country."

In recent years Symonds had worked as a TV commentator for Fox Sports and was a regular on the microphone for Big Bash League broadcasts.

"He hit the ball a long way and just wanted to entertain. He was, in a way, a little bit of an old-fashioned cricketer," former Test captain and Fox Sports colleague Allan Border told the Nine Network.

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"He was an adventurer. Loved his fishing, he loved hiking, camping.

"People liked his very laid-back style.

"He lived in Townsville. When I spoke to him, I think he still had a hundred head of cattle he used to muster.

"Symo away from the cameras and away from the spotlight, loved, I think, a bit of solitude and that is why he loved his fishing. Loved his own time."