Both Bradman’s triples were at Leeds which is kinda cool.
1930 (21 at the time):
105 before lunch, 115 in between lunch and tea, a paltry 89 between tea and stumps.
100 in 145, 200 in 263, 300 in 413
fun fact: Bradman had already scored 101 runs in a session that series during his 254 at Lords.
Worth noting the other top scorers in that match - Hammond 113, Kippax 77, Woodfull 50.
Also worth noting Tate’s performance. 5/124 including Bradman and Kippax.
1934:
102 between tea and stumps, also went on to score 109 in a session at the Oval that series.
100 in 235, 200 in 359, 300 in 457
Other scores of note: Ponsford 181, Leyland 49*, Walters 45
Bradman and Ponsford combined for 485, the other 9 batsmen combined for 82. Bowes had a great performance, 6/142 including Brown, Woodfull, Bradman and McCabe. 5 of them bowled.
Tbf to Hammond, the bowling he faced was poor, but only one other English batsman crossed 50 (Wyatt, 60). Hammond scored his 300 off 355, and scored 111 before lunch, and 150 between lunch and tea.
For Hutton, that wicket was flat, there’s no denying it. Hell that whole series was flat. Hutton scored 300 off 727 (no tons during sessions ofc). England had two other batsman (Leyland and Hardstaff) score 150+.
Ironically, all of these were draws except for Hutton’s (in just 4 days in what was supposed to be a timeless match). Fingleton pulled a muscle and Bradman ****ed his ankle in a footmark. Both were unable to return. Australia only had 3 recognised bowlers, O’Reilly, Fleetwood-Smith and Waite (medium/off spin, averaged 31 in FC). McCabe opened the bowling, he and Barnes both ended up with 38 overs.
Hutton on 40 got lucky, missed stumping opportunity, missed a ball from Chuck and the keeper missed it entirely. Apparently on day two there were also 4 no balls, on every occasion a wicket would have been taken.