Appearing shaken, Warner removed his helmet and immediatly walked off the field leaving his bat behind. Cricket Australia's news site cricket.com.au said the fiery left-hander had passed a concussion test and would be available for the tour of Bangladesh, but would sit out the rest of the intra-squad match in Darwin, Australia's Northern Territory. "It's good that Davey's fine," Aussie pacemen Pat Cummins said after close of play Tuesday. "He's a little bit stiff and sore, but just speaking to him then, he's all fine."Australia coach Darren Lehmann says no fear David Warner will miss Bangladesh tour because of bouncer blow: https://t.co/PTPVKMc4jk #BANvAUS pic.twitter.com/GzD6zbLJwl
— cricket.com.au (@CricketAus) August 16, 2017
.@davidwarner31 expected to be fit for Bangladesh tour after neck blow https://t.co/n4oDqs360A pic.twitter.com/7E9uLPhnd6— HT Sports (@HTSportsNews) August 16, 2017A focus on player safety has been heightened since the tragic death of Australian batsman Phillip Hughes. Hughes, who played 26 Tests, died from bleeding on the brain in November 2014 after being hit on the base of the skull by a rising ball at the Sydney Cricket Ground during a domestic match. The Australian squad flies to Dhaka on Friday for the two-Test tour which begins on August 27.