His average dropped to 56. By any one else's standards, that's an excellent series.Another salient point is that his average dropped dramatically during Bodyline and the batsmen complained about it because batting was actually tough. How would he have fared against Holding, Marshall, Ambrose, Roberts et al?
I cannot find a feature on StatsGuru which ignores Timeless tests, unfortunately. So I cannot confirm this, either way.But I dont think his average is any lower in non-timeless Tests. Plus, his scoring rate has been estimated at around 60, which is right up there with Ponting.
Not a fan of any of these reasons. As someone mentioned before, Bradman has been greatly recognised for hitting the ball along the carpet and finding gaps.I think there are three things which might lower his average.
1. the much greater quality of fielding
2. bowlers who are tall and can extract bounce from the pitch. Bradman was vertically challenged.
and
3. Scientific captaincy. In those days captains tended to move the fieldsmen where the last boundary went. I've read a lot of books on that era and this is commented on ad nauseam. Today with computer analysis, there would be much greater probing of a key batsman's weaknesses.
If you ever read a description of all his innings, it's amazing how often he was dropped. Sometimes more than once. And fieldsmen in those days didn't dive for the ball so you would find he would score slower today with fielders able to cut off boundaries.
If you look at the old tapes, there seemed to be a lot of pie chuckers from that era. And they all seemed to be under six feet.
Slight problem of getting your head cracked open if you made a slight mistake. Maybe you can't appreciate the difficult experience by batsmen during the bodyline series and the impending danger that they always faced.Another salient point is that his average dropped dramatically during Bodyline and the batsmen complained about it because batting was actually tough. How would he have fared against Holding, Marshall, Ambrose, Roberts et al?
I think there are three things which might lower his average.
1. the much greater quality of fielding
2. bowlers who are tall and can extract bounce from the pitch. Bradman was vertically challenged.
and
3. Scientific captaincy. In those days captains tended to move the fieldsmen where the last boundary went. I've read a lot of books on that era and this is commented on ad nauseam. Today with computer analysis, there would be much greater probing of a key batsman's weaknesses.
If you ever read a description of all his innings, it's amazing how often he was dropped. Sometimes more than once. And fieldsmen in those days didn't dive for the ball so you would find he would score slower today with fielders able to cut off boundaries.
If you look at the old tapes, there seemed to be a lot of pie chuckers from that era. And they all seemed to be under six feet.
There'll seem to be a lot of pie-chuckers from any era if you look at certain tapes only. Personally I've never read of a remarkable amount of dropped catches in Bradman innings, and I do tend to undertake a fair amount of look at those sorts of things.Another salient point is that his average dropped dramatically during Bodyline and the batsmen complained about it because batting was actually tough. How would he have fared against Holding, Marshall, Ambrose, Roberts et al?
There'll seem to be a lot of pie-chuckers from any era if you look at certain tapes only. Personally I've never read of a remarkable amount of dropped catches in Bradman innings, and I do tend to undertake a fair amount of look at those sorts of things.
As I've said before about computer analysis, it can help batsmen as well as bowlers.
As regards comparing Larwood and Voce to Roberts, Holding, Garner and Croft, considerable difference in that they weren't permitted a ring leg-side field. That was what made Bodyline so difficult. Any fool can bowl a few short deliveries; bowling them, with the accuracy of those two, to such fields is an entirely different kettle-of-fish.
Neither Vivian Richards nor anyone else would have had a prayer against bowlers of that calibre (regardless of speed - and while estimation is a fool's game Voce's pace seems likeliest to have been that of a Darren Gough or Dale Steyn, Larwood's that of a Shoaib Akhtar or Allan Donald) with those fields.Fortunately, very few fools can bowl at 90 mph - Voce was fast medium at best
Tapes of the Bodyline series don't reflect well on either side.
English tactics stretched the letter of the law whilst the Aussies were pretty pathetic at dealing with short-pitched bowling, whatever the field.
IMO, IVA would've destroyed the strategy within 1 test
Anyone's average would've dropped against that attack, it's one of if not the finest in history.At least Bradman admitted that he never faced an attack like the Windies and his average would've dropped - for that admission you have to give him credit
Neither Vivian Richards nor anyone else would have had a prayer against bowlers of that calibre (regardless of speed - and while estimation is a fool's game Voce's pace seems likeliest to have been that of a Darren Gough or Dale Steyn, Larwood's that of a Shoaib Akhtar or Allan Donald) with those fields.
It was totally unfair (as well as dangerous in those days) and hence was stopped.
Anyone's average would've dropped against that attack, it's one of if not the finest in history.
Now this is what the ban feature should be used for; voting this way on a pollAnother salient point is that his average dropped dramatically during Bodyline and the batsmen complained about it because batting was actually tough. How would he have fared against Holding, Marshall, Ambrose, Roberts et al?
....and for me this is evidence how little many of us understand what a sustained leg stump attack by a deadly accurate fast bowler with an unlimited legside field can do to a batsman irrespective of how great the batsman at the crease was.Let's get real for a moment
Anyone with half a brain would've looked at the fields and not played a shot because it was all crap not going anywhere near the stumps - isnt that you're strategy?
Imagine McGrath (Voce) bowling bouncer after bouncer at Gavaskar (Bradman) with a stacked leg side field - he'd be leaving everything and laughing at the fast bowler for wasting his effort whilst thanking McGrath (Voce) for removing the best weapons from his arsenal and totally wasting the new ball
In the meantime, Viv would've pasted those bowlers
For mine, as much as anything, bodyline is evidence of how much the game has changed
AWTA.....and for me this is evidence how little many of us understand what a sustained leg stump attack by a deadly accurate fast bowler with an unlimited legside field can do to a batsman irrespective of how great the batsman at the crease was.
[B]India (2nd Innings) R [/B]
[B]S M Gavaskar c Julien b Holding 2[/B]
D B Vengsarkar lbw b Jumadeen 21
M Amarnath st Murray b Jumadeen 60
S Madan Lal b Holding 8
S Venkat b Holding 0
Kirmani (k) not out 0
B S Bedi (c) [COLOR="DarkRed"][B]absent hurt[/B][/COLOR]
B S Chandra [COLOR="DarkRed"][B]absent hurt[/B][/COLOR]
B P Patel [B][COLOR="DarkRed"]absent hurt[/COLOR][/B]
G R Viswanath [COLOR="DarkRed"][B]absent hurt[/B][/COLOR]
A D Gaekwad [COLOR="DarkRed"][B]absent hurt[/B][/COLOR]
Extras (nb 6) 6
[B]Total All Out 97 [/B]
26.2 overs @ 3.68 rpo
Well, I don't quite agree. I've heard he scored many runs on the legside, similar to McCullum. And McCullum has very attacking and quick footworkI can understand the Sachin part of the mix but McCullum?? Bradman was notorious for hitting the ball along the ground and finding the gaps, McCullum just goes out there and smashes the daylights out of it!
He really looks like neither:Kind of off topic, but does anyone know where to get Bradman film footage? I have a picture in my mind of how him batting would look. Something of a mix of Brendan McCullum and Sachin.
Just a bit on the similarity with McCullum in general and Bradman's technique in particularWell, I don't quite agree. I've heard he scored many runs on the legside, similar to McCullum. And McCullum has very attacking and quick footwork
Thats a very interesting point and discussed often amongst cricket enthusiasts.SJS, I was at a presentation on Saturday night and Young Phillip Highes, just turned 19, from the NSW side was there.
And this fellow, who scored116 in the Pura Cup final at 18 years old, is a short fellow - around 5 feet 6 or 7 inches.
Which got us to discussing how it seems that a large number of really great batsmen are on the short side. I wonder whether being shorter in stature somehow assists players in reading the length of the ball, as opposed to the taller fellas.
Of course, there have been some great tall players - G Chappell, G Pollock, I think Hammond was a big man, as was Grace (at least for his time), Clive Lloyd, Vengsakar iirc was quite tall as well. But it seems the majority of the really fine players are shorter fellows. For example - Bradman, Vishy, Tendulkar, Lara, Ponting, Greenidge, Haynes, Harvey, S Waugh, Border, Richards, Javed, Anwar to name but a few (and not exclusively by any means) were - if not short, then no more than average height it seems.
Do you think it's just a coincidence? I haven't heard of there being any studies done as to why that might be the case, but I'd be interested to know if there is any science on the subject.