Sir Donald BradmanSir Donald Bradman RSS Feed

Australia

Full name Donald George Bradman

Born August 27, 1908, Cootamundra, New South Wales

Died February 25, 2001, Kensington Park, Adelaide, South Australia (aged 92 years 182 days)

Major teams Australia, New South Wales, South Australia

Nickname The Don

Batting style Right-hand bat

Bowling style Legbreak

Height 5 ft 7 in

Donald George Bradman
Batting and fielding averages
Mat Inns NO Runs HS Ave 100 50 6s Ct St
Tests 52 80 10 6996 334 99.94 29 13 6 32 0
First-class 234 338 43 28067 452* 95.14 117 69 131 1
Bowling averages
Mat Inns Balls Runs Wkts BBI BBM Ave Econ SR 4w 5w 10
Tests 52 9 160 72 2 1/8 1/15 36.00 2.70 80.0 0 0 0
First-class 234 2114 1367 36 3/35 37.97 3.87 58.7 0 0
Career statistics
Test debut Australia v England at Brisbane, Nov 30-Dec 5, 1928 scorecard
Last Test England v Australia at The Oval, Aug 14-18, 1948 scorecard
Test statistics
First-class span 1927/28 - 1948/49
Profile

Wisden overview
Sir Donald Bradman of Australia was, beyond any argument, the greatest batsman who ever lived and the greatest cricketer of the 20th century. Only WG Grace, in the formative years of the game, even remotely matched his status as a player. And The Don lived on into the 21st century, more than half-a-century after he retired. In that time, his reputation not merely as a player but as an administrator, selector, sage and cricketing statesman only increased. His contribution transcended sport; his exploits changed Australia's relationship to what used to be called the "mother country". Throughout the 1930s and '40s Bradman was the world's master cricketer, so far ahead of everyone else that comparisons became pointless. In 1930, he scored 974 runs in the series, 309 of them in one amazing day at Headingley, and in seven Test series against England he remained a figure of utter dominance; Australia lost the Ashes only once, in 1932-33, when England were so spooked by Bradman that they devised a system of bowling, Bodyline, that history has damned as brutal and unfair, simply to thwart him. He still averaged 56 in the series. In all, he went to the crease 80 times in Tests, and scored 29 centuries. He needed just four in his last Test innings, at The Oval in 1948, to ensure an average of 100 ­- but was out second ball for 0, a rare moment of human failing that only added to his everlasting appeal. Bradman made all those runs at high speed in a manner that bewildered opponents and entranced spectators. Though his batting was not classically beautiful, it was always awesome. As Neville Cardus put it, he was a devastating rarity: "A genius with an eye for business." Matthew Engel

Wisden Essay
"He's out!" - to the thousands who read them, whether they were interested in cricket or not, the two words blazoned across the London evening newspaper placards could have meant only one thing: somewhere, someone had managed to dismiss Don Bradman, of itself a lifelong claim to fame.

Sir Donald George Bradman was, without any question, the greatest phenomenon in the history of cricket, indeed in the history of all ball games. To start with, he had a deep and undying love of cricket, as well, of course, as exceptional natural ability. It was always said he could have become a champion at squash or tennis or golf or billiards, had he preferred them to cricket. The fact that, as a boy, he sharpened his reflexes and developed his strokes by hitting golf ball with a cricket stump as it rebounded off a water tank attests to his eye, fleetness of foot and, even when young, his rare powers of concentration.

Bradman himself was of the opinion that there were other batsmen, contemporaries of his, who had the talent to be just as prolific as he was but lacked the concentration. Stan McCabe, who needed a particular challenge to bring the best of him, was no doubt one of them. "I wish I could bat like that", Bradman's assessment of McCabe's 232 in the Trent Bridge Test of 1938, must stand with W.G.'s "Give me Arthur" [Shrewsbury], when asked to name the best batsman he had played with, as the grandest tribute ever paid by one great cricketer to another.

So, with the concentration and the commitment and the calculation and the certainty that were synonymous with Bradman, went a less obvious but no less telling humility. He sought privacy and attracted adulation.

How did anyone ever get him out? The two bowlers to do it most often, if sometimes at horrendous cost, were both spinners--Clarrie Grimmett, who had ten such coups to his credit with leg-breaks and googlies, and Hedley Verity, who also had ten, eight of them for England. Is there anything, I wonder, to be deduced from this? Both, for example, had a flattish trajectory, which may have deterred Bradman from jumping out to drive, something he was always looking to do.

Grimmett was not, in fact, the only wrist-spinner to make the great man seem, at times, almost mortal. Bill O'Reilly was another--Bradman called him the finest and therefore, presumably, the most testing bowler he played against--as were Ian Peebles and Walter Robins; and it was with a googly that Eric Hollies bowled him for a duck in his last Test innings, at The Oval in 1948, when he was within four runs of averaging 100 in Test cricket. Perhaps, very occasionally, he did have trouble reading wrist-spin; but that, after all, is its devious purpose.

By his own unique standards, Bradman was discomfited by Bodyline, the shameless method of attack which Douglas Jardine employed to depose him in Australia in 1932-33. Discomfited, yes--but he still averaged 56.57 in the Test series. If there really is a blemish on his amazing record it is, I suppose, the absence of a significant innings on one of those "sticky dogs" of old, when the ball was hissing and cavorting under a hot sun following heavy rain. This is not to say he couldn't have played one, but that on the big occasion, when the chance arose, he never did.

His dominance on all other occasions was absolute. R. C. Robertson-Glasgow called the Don "that rarest of Nature's creatures, a genius with an eye for business." He could be 250 not out and yet still scampering the first run to third man or long leg with a view to inducing a fielding error. Batsmen of today would be amazed had they seen it, and better cricketers for having done so. It may be apocryphal, but if, to a well-wisher, he did desire his 309 not out on the first day of the Headingley Test of 1930 as a nice bit of practice for tomorrow, he could easily have meant it.

He knows as well as anyone, though, that with so much more emphasis being placed on containment and so many fewer overs being bowled, his 309 of 70 years ago would be nearer 209 today. Which makes it all the more fortuitous that he played when he did, by doing so, he had the chance to renew a nation and reinvent a game. His fame, like W.G.'s, will never fade.
Wisden Cricketers' Almanack

Notes

New South Wales Career Span: 1927-28 to 1933-34

South Australia Career Span: 1935-36 to 1948-49

Wisden Cricketer of the Year 1931

Australian Cricket Hall of Fame 1996

Knighted for services to cricket 1949

Appointed Commander of the Order of Australia (AC) 1979

Selected as one of five Wisden Cricketers of the Century, 2000

Timeline
  • August 27, 1908
    Small town, big boy
    • Donald George Bradman is born in the small country town of Cootamundra in New South Wales
  • 1920
    High school, high score
    • Scores his first century, aged 12, for the Bowral Intermediate High School, but gets in trouble from the headmaster for leaving a bat behind
  • 1925
    O'Reilly gets a taste of the future
    • Starts playing regularly for Bowral and collects 234 against Wingello, a team which includes Bill O'Reilly, the future Australian legspinning great. Later in the summer he picks up 300 against Moss Vale, finishing the season with 1318 runs at 101.3
  • Showing 1 of 11 Next
Best Performances
  • 254 v England, Lord's, 1930
    • There were many out-of-this-world performances from Bradman, but this innings at Lord's was the pinnacle, mainly because he said it was. "Practically without exception every ball went where it was intended," Bradman wrote in Farewell to Cricket. It was his second Test of his maiden trip to England and the innings began with the fastest Test fifty of his career, the initial milestone arriving in 45 minutes. Neville Cardus described it as "the most murderous onslaught I have ever known in a Test match". "After tea a massacre, nothing less. Never before this hour, or two hours until close of play, and never since, has a batsman equalled Bradman's cool deliberate murder or spifflication of all bowling." A century came in the final session of the second day and almost 24 hours after it started, the innings ended with Bradman falling to an excellent diving catch at extra cover by Percy Chapman. Bradman, aged 21 and the youngest Test double-century maker, had stayed for 376 balls, piercing 25 fours, and launched a reputation for supreme greatness.
  • 334 v England, Headingley, 1930
    • Two weeks after his best innings, Bradman produced his biggest. The previous highest in Tests was Tip Foster's 287 at the SCG in 1903-04, but Bradman beat that by the end of the opening day in Leeds, which concluded with a drive for four through cover. His century came before lunch, another 115 runs were added between the break and tea, and at stumps he walked off with sore feet, a fresh mind and 309. There were a couple of chances, but Sir Pelham Warner said it best: "This is like throwing stones at Gibraltar." A quiet night followed before a more difficult second day, with Bradman edging Maurice Tate to George Duckworth after half an hour. With 974 runs on an astounding tour of records and bowling ruins, Bradman's old, quiet life was over.
  • 103 not out v England, MCG, 1932-33
    • Both England and Australia were pleased Bradman was playing in the second Test. Douglas Jardine was desperate to try his tailor-made Bodyline plan; the home supporters wanted their hero to conquer it. Mass silence came with Bradman's first-ball duck to Bill Bowes in the opening innings, but there was plenty of noise in the second when he steered Australia to a match-winning lead of 250. Even Bradman was uncomfortably against Bodyline, but he jinked and ducked, hooked and pulled, to frustrate the tourists. His century was not secure until after Bert Ironmonger, the No. 11, joined him and survived the two deliveries needed to end Wally Hammond's over. Six balls later Bradman lofted Bill Voce over the legside and the three runs took him to his hundred. It was probably the most important of his career.
  • Showing 1 of 2 Next
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Dec 2, 2008

The auctioneer, Charles Leski, inspects the Baggy Green cap worn by Don Bradman during the 1948 'Invincibles' tour. It is expected to make more than AUS$600,000, Melbourne, December 2, 2008

The auctioneer, Charles Leski, inspects the Baggy Green cap worn by Don Bradman during the 1948 'Invincibles' tour

© Getty Images

Oct 17, 2008

Cover image of <i>Bradman in Wisden</i>, edited by Graeme Wright

Cover image of Bradman in Wisden

© Getty Images

Sep 24, 2008

Auctioneer Charles Leski holds up the first cricket bat used by Sir Donald Bradman in his Test career and which will be auctioned off in Melbourne. The bat did not see much action in that first Test, but is expected to fetch up to US$100,000 when auctioned. Bradman was dropped after an inauspicious debut in which he scored 18 and one in Australia's 675-run thrashing by England in the first Test in Brisbane in 1928-29. The bat was signed by the entire 1928-29 Australian team as well as the conquering English who won the series 4-1. Forty-seven signatures in total are on the bat. Melbourne, September 24, 2008

Auctioneer Charles Leski holds up the first cricket bat used by Sir Donald Bradman in his Test career

© AFP

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