I dont agree with the bond ball .. ganga is shaping to play it from off stump.. because thats where it looks like its heading.. by the time he realised it was swinging into leg it was to late..
bradman never had to deal with swing bowling at any level of his game.. todays bowlers have that as their magic bullet..
wasim had it down to a fine art.. and new when to use it..
bond devasted aussie top order regulary and bradman would have been part of that top order..
But so what if Bond terrorised the Aussie top order in one or two games? Devon Malcolm went through them at the Oval in 1993 as well. Bond > Malcolm of course, but saying Bond troubled Australia, Bradman would have been in the top order had he played, QED Bradman would have been troubled, is just, with respect, wrong.
It's always going to be a matter of opinion of course and we're all as right as each other because it's educated guess work.
The analogy you seek to draw in this case is like my saying Lee went through, say the WI top order, they couldn't handle him. Richards, Greenidge and Haynes, had they been around, would have been in that top order, QED they would have struggled and Lee would have gone through them. Or to swap the batting and bowling roles around - Zoe Goss bowled Brian Lara at a game at the SCG. Lara was one of the two greatest batsmen of his time, ergo all other test players would have struggled against Zoe Goss. I don't think you can say that (and I'm not saying you are FWIW).
I just think part of being a great player is adaptability - the great players adapt, be it to rule changes, different conditions, innovations in the game, different formats. It's a large part of what makes them great imo.
No doubt Bradman's game would have changed in this era - it would have to. But I don't see how you can go past the fact that he averaged 99.94. The very number is so high, and so far ahead of not just his contemporaries but every other player to have played the game for any worthwhile length of time in any era, that he purely and simply was the greatest batsman the game has seen, at least in test cricket (others will argue Grace and fair enough, but I make the point re test matches).
I think something which sometimes gets overlooked was that Bradman was ruthlessly efficient. Based on all I've heard or read about him, he cared not one whit for style over substance - it was all business to him. Given that was the case, that he brought a single mindedness to his batting and was interested in not "how" but "how many", I just don't see how he would fail to still be the greatest batsman ever, and by a considerable margin.