Amid tears and tributes, Phillip Hughes laid to rest

Published December 3, 2014
One of the 63 bats detailing the career of cricketer Phillip Hughes is seen during a memorial service at the Sydney Cricket Ground on December 3, 2014. — AFP
One of the 63 bats detailing the career of cricketer Phillip Hughes is seen during a memorial service at the Sydney Cricket Ground on December 3, 2014. — AFP
A sign in memory of Australian batsman Phillip Hughes is displayed outside St. Patricks Primary School hours before Hughes' funeral in his home town of Macksville in northern New South Wales, on December 3, 2014. — AFP
A sign in memory of Australian batsman Phillip Hughes is displayed outside St. Patricks Primary School hours before Hughes' funeral in his home town of Macksville in northern New South Wales, on December 3, 2014. — AFP
Cricket bats and helmets are lined up outside Macksville Public School hours before the funeral of Australian batsman Phillip Hughes in his home town of Macksville in northern New South Wales, on December 3, 2014. — AFP
Cricket bats and helmets are lined up outside Macksville Public School hours before the funeral of Australian batsman Phillip Hughes in his home town of Macksville in northern New South Wales, on December 3, 2014. — AFP
Australian Test cricket captain Michael Clarke and his wife Kyly Clarke arrive for the funeral of Australian batsman Phillip Hughes in his home town of Macksville in northern New South Wales on December 3, 2014. — AFP
Australian Test cricket captain Michael Clarke and his wife Kyly Clarke arrive for the funeral of Australian batsman Phillip Hughes in his home town of Macksville in northern New South Wales on December 3, 2014. — AFP
Australian bowler Sean Abbott (R) arrives for the funeral of Australian cricket batsman Phillip Hughes in Macksville, northern New South Wales on December 3, 2014. — AFP
Australian bowler Sean Abbott (R) arrives for the funeral of Australian cricket batsman Phillip Hughes in Macksville, northern New South Wales on December 3, 2014. — AFP
Former Australian bowler Shane Warne (R) and West Indies batsman Brian Lara (L) arrive for the funeral of Australian cricket batsman Phillip Hughes in Macksville, northern New South Wales on December 3, 2014. — AFP
Former Australian bowler Shane Warne (R) and West Indies batsman Brian Lara (L) arrive for the funeral of Australian cricket batsman Phillip Hughes in Macksville, northern New South Wales on December 3, 2014. — AFP
Australia's Prime Minister Tony Abbott (C) arrives for the funeral of Australian cricket batsman Phillip Hughes in Macksville, northern New South Wales on December 3, 2014. — AFP
Australia's Prime Minister Tony Abbott (C) arrives for the funeral of Australian cricket batsman Phillip Hughes in Macksville, northern New South Wales on December 3, 2014. — AFP
Tributes to Australian cricketer Phillip Hughes are displayed on the pitch at the Sydney Cricket Ground (SCG) December 3, 2014. — Reuters
Tributes to Australian cricketer Phillip Hughes are displayed on the pitch at the Sydney Cricket Ground (SCG) December 3, 2014. — Reuters
Mourners look at the 63 bats detailing the career of cricketer Phillip Hughes during a memorial service at the Sydney Cricket Ground on December 3, 2014. — AFP
Mourners look at the 63 bats detailing the career of cricketer Phillip Hughes during a memorial service at the Sydney Cricket Ground on December 3, 2014. — AFP
Mourners gather for a memorial service at the Sydney Cricket Ground and look at some of the 63 bats with inscriptions detailing the career of cricketer Phillip Hughes in Sydney on December 3, 2014. — AP
Mourners gather for a memorial service at the Sydney Cricket Ground and look at some of the 63 bats with inscriptions detailing the career of cricketer Phillip Hughes in Sydney on December 3, 2014. — AP
People watch live a broadcast of Australian batsman Phillip Hughes funeral broadcast from his home town Macksville at the Sydney Cricket Ground on December 3, 2014. — AFP
People watch live a broadcast of Australian batsman Phillip Hughes funeral broadcast from his home town Macksville at the Sydney Cricket Ground on December 3, 2014. — AFP
People watch live a broadcast of Australian batsman Phillip Hughes funeral broadcast from his home town Macksville at the Sydney Cricket Ground on December 3, 2014. — AFP
People watch live a broadcast of Australian batsman Phillip Hughes funeral broadcast from his home town Macksville at the Sydney Cricket Ground on December 3, 2014. — AFP
Live footage on a big screen shows Australian Test cricket captain Michael Clarke (top C) attending the funeral of Australian batsman Phillip Hughes, as people watch from the school oval in Hughes' home town of Macksville in northern New South Wales on December 3, 2014. — AFP
Live footage on a big screen shows Australian Test cricket captain Michael Clarke (top C) attending the funeral of Australian batsman Phillip Hughes, as people watch from the school oval in Hughes' home town of Macksville in northern New South Wales on December 3, 2014. — AFP
Pallbearers carry the coffin of Australian batsman Phillip Hughes as it arrives ahead of his funeral in his home town of Macksville in northern New South Wales on December 3, 2014. — AFP
Pallbearers carry the coffin of Australian batsman Phillip Hughes as it arrives ahead of his funeral in his home town of Macksville in northern New South Wales on December 3, 2014. — AFP

The funeral of Australian Test cricketer Phillip Hughes began to the strains of a song entitled “Forever Young” in his hometown of Macksville on Wednesday as a nation united to celebrate the life of a sportsman cut down in his prime. Cricket luminaries and fans gathered for the emotional funeral of Hughes, whose death from a freak on-field injury brought his grieving hometown to a standstill.

Cricket bats stood silent sentry outside schools and homes, many adorned with messages for their favourite son. Hughes died on Nov 27 from bleeding on the brain, two days after being knocked unconscious by a bouncer while batting during a domestic match at the Sydney Cricket Ground, throwing the cricketing world into mourning.

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