Again.. scoring 6996 runs is not the same as whatever wickes Haynes took..
And what you are using is not logic at all, coz the test matches played back then were less frequent and people had to travel in ships to even reach destinations.. And for the rest of your post, you would do well to read up on what all this meant in Bradman's time before you start comparing him with Yuvraj...
Yes I agree whatever wickets Haynes got is not equivalent to the 6996 runs Bradman made- and hence 6996 runs is not the same as 14692 test runs, let alone the further 18,000 runs SRT made in ODIs.This is why I have little respect for Fanatical Bradmanites, because they will be all about averages and how that sets the Don apart from his contemporaries, and will then suddenly attest that total runs scored is a significant indicator as soon as it suits their argument i.e. the very parameter that shows Sachin is the the greatest. Yes I agree, total number of runs scored has more merit than playing averages and that, in addition to sheer level of skill (something that the most fanatical of Bradmanites cannot testify to unless they are about 132 years old), is what I think separates Sachin from the rest.
On test matches being less frequent in those days.....I cannot disagree with that and that is another one of my issues with Bradman being the best- that era was so far drawn from the professional standards and hence demands of 1970s onwards that it is not even worth comparing players from then to now. So what if they had to travel on ships- they only had one country to travel to, that too a country that speaks the same language and has a very similar culture- they didnt have to go to Joburg, Kingston, Kolkata or Multan.