"a massive zebra" wrote:
Lovely to have you here. Did you ever manage to attend a Test Match in which Bradman was playing for Australia?
Thank you for those warm words of welcome, "a massive zebra". As others pointed out I saw Bradman bat in two test matches. The 103 he hit at Headingley in 1938 was majestic -- a real thrill for me -- a never to be forgotten experience. He did indeed fall LBW at 11 in the Old Trafford Test in 1948 and that was a disappointment, for as my father begrudgingly said: "He's not like other batsmen because he always looks like he is going to hit a century when he walks out from the pavilion and everyone expects it".
BTW, several people have asked me if I think Don Bradman was superior to present day top flight batsmen and if he would do as well in the modern game. I think the comparison is impossible to make -- I think Bradman would still dominate if he played today but, with Lara and Tendulkar on the scene, no where near as much as he did in the 1930s. My father -- a fervent England supporter -- used to say that Jack Hobbs was a better batter than Bradman, well, I didn't believe that (and the statistics don't support it), but I didn't see Hobbs bat. However, I did see Bradman bat and I am still awed by his incedible footwork
and the way he always seemed to be in exactly the right position to dispatch the ball with consummate skill. I also believe that Lara and Tendulkar would be just as brilliant with the bat had they played back then as they are now -- similarly, I think Jack Hobbs would be an outstanding opening batsman no matter what era he played in.
I forgot to mention on my Web page that I did see Bradman bat a third time during the Australian 1948 Invincible tour -- at Scarborough, Yorkshire, vs H.D.G. Leveson-Gower's XI. Bradman hit a sparling 153 and Sid Barnes (he of the magnificent off-side strokes and my other favorite batsman) 151. This was the last at bat in England for both of them -- I think they played a match in Scotland before leaving for Australia. BTW, I witnessed some of the greatest fast bowling I have ever seen in that match as Ray Lindwall took six wickets for 69 runs at a wonderfully controlled but blistering pace.