live cricket scores - Sir Donald Bradman


Tuesday , July 27 2010 , 02:51 PM
 
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Sir Donald Bradman,Australia. (1908-2001)

Sir Donald Bradman ,the only Australian player to be knighted so far is arguably the best  cricket batsman that has ever lived and can be rated as one of the top most 20th century  cricket player.Only WG Grace can be compared to great legend.Don had lived into the 21st century and has increased his reputation as a able administrator,selector and many other roles.
 Test records created by Sir Don
The legend had created many test  record.The most notable was the unrivalling batting average of  99.94 in 52 tests.The legend had played test cricket against four cricket nations;India,England,South Africa and West Indies.Sir Don had not played long format against New Zealand.The legend had created highest test batting average  for a  five test series with a staggering average of 201.50 against South Africa in 1931-1932.Sir Don has a highest 50 to 100 run conversion rate and that is 69.5 %.Sir Don has scored the most number of double centuries and has cored two triple centuries.The record in the triple century has been shared with Lara and Shewag.The legend had scored 12 double centuries in just 52 test matches.The legend had scored  three double centuries in a test series in year 1930 and the record still holds.He had scored  7 times  500 runs or more in a test series and the  test record  has been shared by Brian Lara.He has the highest  % of centuries  in innings played and that is 36.25 %.
Cricket Australia and Sir Don
In 1960,Sir Don was elected as the chairman of Cricket Australia and  he was the first former test player to be given that honor.He had served  Cricket Australia as  selector,member of board and chairman.
Sir Donald Bradman  began his illustrious career in 1928 . In 1988 the Australian Confederation of Sport  had voted the legend as  the greatest male athlete of the past 200 years.  The legend died   on 25 February 2001 aged 92 and  more than 5000 fans lined in Adelaide to pay homage to the legend. His achievement on the cricket field between 1928 and 1948 can be said as globally best.
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live cricket scores - Sir Donald Bradman

live cricket scores - Sir Donald Bradman


Thursday , September 02 2010 , 03:04 PM
 
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It will long be remembered as the day that marked the end of the finest innings in world cricket history. February 25, 2001 is a date known by cricket followers far and wide as the one that marks the passing of the great Sir Donald George Bradman, a legendary cricketer many have described as the greatest batsman of all time. Many of the amazing batting feats of The Don still remain unsurpassed till this day.

A champion performer both on and off the field, Sir Donald Bradman was known for his sportsmanship and his devotion to the spirit of cricket. Having devoted the best part of his life to the sport, join with us as we pay tribute to this great man and reminisce as the 1st anniversary (25 Feb 2002) of his passing approaches, by taking a look at the life, cricket career and achievements of The Don.

Universally regarded as the greatest cricket player of all time and one of Australia's greatest popular heroes.

Over an international career spanning nearly 20 years from 1930 to 1948, Bradman's statistical achievements were unparalleled. He broke scoring records for both first-class and international matches, his highest international score (334 not out) still standing as the highest ever test class score by an Australian (though recently equalled by Mark Taylor, who deliberately cut his score at that point, in what many regard as a tribute to Bradman).

He so dominated the game that special bowling tactics, known as leg theory or Bodyline, regarded by many as unsporting and dangerous, were devised by England captain Douglas Jardine to reduce his dominance in a series of international matches (Ashes) against England in the Australian summer of 1932-33. The principal English exponent of Bodyline was the Nottinghamshire pace bowler Harold Larwood, and the contest between Bradman and Larwood was to prove to be the focal point of the contest.

Some indication of his superlative skill was that his average for that series, 56.57, is above the career averages of all but a handful of international players in the 125-odd years of international cricket matches.

Despite occasional battles with illness, he continued to dominate world cricket throughout the 1930's and is credited with raising the spirit of a nation (Australia) suffering under the vagaries of the economic depression, until war intervened.

Despite approaching forty, he returned to play cricket after World War II, leading one of the most talented teams in Australia's history. In his farewell 1948 tour of England, the team he led, dubbed "the Invincibles", went undefeated throughout the tour, a feat unmatched until this time.

On the occasion of his last international innings, Bradman needed four runs to be able to retire with a batting average of 100, but was dismissed for nought (in cricketing parlance, "a duck") by spin bowler Eric Hollies. Applauded onto the pitch by both teams, it was sometimes claimed that he was unable to see the ball due to the tears welling in his eyes, a claim Bradman always dismissed as sentimental nonsense. "I knew it would be my last test match after a career spanning 20-years", he said, "but to suggest I got out as some people did, because I had tears in my eyes is to belittle the bowler and is quite untrue." Regardless, he was given a guard of honor by players and spectators alike as he left the ground with a batting average of 99.94 from his 52 tests, nearly double the average of any other player before or since. He was awarded a knighthood in 1949, and a Companion of the Order of Australia (Australia's highest civil honor) in 1979.

After retiring from playing cricket, Bradman continued working as a stockbroker. Allegations that he had acted improperly during the collapse of his employer's firm and the subsequent establishment of his own, made behind closed doors up until his death, were publicised in November 2001. He became heavily involved in cricket administration, serving as a selector for the national team for nearly 30 years. He was selector (and acknowledged as a force urging the players of both teams to play entertaining, attacking cricket) for the famous Australia - West Indies test series of 1960-61, and was also involved in negotiations with the World Series Cricket schism in the late 1970's. He was also famous for answering innumerable letters from cricket fans across the world, which he continued to do until well into his eighties.

Bradman married his childhood sweetheart, Jessie, and had one child. An intensely private person, probably because of the intense media scrutiny he suffered under, he was regarded as aloof even by teammates, particularly in later years. A strict Methodist, he has occasionally been accused of anti-Catholicism in his actions as captain and selector, however, it should be pointed out that at that time sectarian prejudice was very widespread in Australia.

Statistical analyses give some credence to the claim that Bradman dominated his sport more than Pele (soccer ), Ty Cobb (baseball), Tiger Woods (golf) or Michael Jordan (basketball), amongst other champions of their disciplines. Regardless, his impact on a nation's psyche is arguably unmatched.


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