[1][2][3] A voiceover plays with Shane commenting on his rise to cricket, his scandals and how he received Queen's Birthday Honours and even a State Funeral.
Shane meets Simone Callahan (Marny Kennedy) at a cricket event and the two begin a relationship where he breaks the rules to see her in the hotel after he cannot take her on the team bus.
But the media have a field day when they spot him smoking at the same nightclub after he promised a quit aid that he would stop.
As Shane and Mark Waugh (Ben Hall) face Malcolm Speed (Andrew Blackman) after allegations of a 'bribe' were made against another team's captain, Speed tells the both of them that the scandal and bookmaking deal with need to be made public to save the face of Cricket Australia.
But Shane undergoes surgery on both his finger and shoulder and when he attempts to play he is almost dropped from the side by Steve.
Shane reveals that after he has one bad game he wanted to quit due to media attention he was receiving.
When Shane injures his shoulder again and faces surgery, he undergoes intense rehab with the teams physio Errol.
When his mother (Jacquie Brennan) comes in and says that he isn't looking "crash hot" and fat shames him after putting weight on after surgery.
He faces a secret disciplinary meeting where his mother reveals that she told Shane to take the pill to 'get rid of his double chin'.
The fallout continues, with Shane facing more scrutiny from the media over his texting scandal with a UK nurse.
Shane faces the media and expresses regret over what transpired and how he let down his family, Simone watches on and speaks with TJ.
Shane is forced into a meeting with CEO, Speed and makes him read all his recent articles from all over the world.
Shane faces scrutiny again in 2005 over another cheating scandal involving British student, Laura Sayers (Dannielle Woodward).
Shane ends his relationship with Liz Hurley as their schedules collide when they want to spend time with each other and he realises he can't do long distance anymore.
[4] In 2017, the Seven Network announced a bio-drama based on the life of Shane Warne, to be titled Warnie and produced by Screentime and written by Matt Ford.