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Flicker books of Bradman in action

The State Library holds in its collection two flicker books that show Don Bradman demonstrating the batting strokes - square cut, late cut, pull, and leg glance. Take a look at the clip below.

Bradman's runs and records

If Bradman had scored just four runs in his last Test innings at The Oval in 1948, he would have finished with a Test average of 100 runs an innings - a level of performance unchallenged by any other batsman at the time, before or since.

Bradman was bowled second ball by England's Eric Hollies for a duck. Perfectionists and cricket enthusiasts alike will mourn that dismissal forever.

Don Bradman played in 52 Test matches for Australia from 1928 to 1948. World War II interrupted his career at its peak.

  • He batted 80 times against England, the West Indies, South Africa and India for 6996 runs at that average of 99.94.

  • Bradman made 29 Test hundreds.

  • Discounting his 10 not outs and his multiple hundreds, this means Bradman exceeded the century more often than every third time he went out to bat.

  • His nearest contemporary in batting genius, England's Walter Hammond, made only 253 more runs in 33 more Test matches and another 60 innings at an average of 41 less than Bradman. Hammond's 22 hundreds came at a rate greater than every sixth time he went out to bat.

  • Bradman made 12 Test double-centuries or more, with 334 and 304 against England and 299 not out against South Africa the highest.

  • In all first-class cricket Don Bradman scored 28,067 runs at an average of 95.14 with 117 centuries and a highest score of 452 not out. He hit 37 double-centuries, six of them over 300.

The cricket career of Sir Donald Bradman cannot be measured in mere facts and figures. The Don gave enjoyment not to thousand of people, but to millions.

And he didn't mind enjoying himself, either.

In 1931 he scored 100 runs in three overs! NSW cricketer Wendell Bill was batting at the other end.

So there it is : 99.94. It is six-hundredths of a sharp single short of 100, or one step down the wicket to the slow bowlers.

Some cricket purists are glad Bradman didn't hit that solitary boundary and leave the game with a permanent century against his name.

His failure to do so proves to them that even the greatest in the game isn't as great as the game itself.

statistics

 

 

Batting

Fielding Bowling

Opponent

Mts

Inns

NO

Runs

HS

0s

50s

100s

Avge

Ct

Std

Runs

Wkts

Avge

Best

TESTS

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

England

37

63

7

5 028

334

6

12

19

89.79

20

-

51

1

51.00

1/23

India

5

6

2

715

201

-

1

4

178.75

6

-

4

-

-

-

South Africa

5

5

1

806

299*

-

-

4

201.50

2

-

2

-

-

-

West Indies

5

6

-

447

223

1

-

2

74.50

4

-

15

1

15.00

1/8

Total Test statistics

52

80

10

6 996

334

7

13

29

99.94

32

-

72

2

36.00

1/8

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Opponent

Mts

Inns

NO

Runs

HS

0s

50s

100s

Avge

Ct

Std

Runs

Wkts

Avge

Best

SHEFFIELD SHIELD

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

NSW

9

14

3

864

143

1

2

4

78.55

10

1

-

-

-

-

Queensland

18

26

4

3 085

452*

3

4

14

140.23

11

-

62

2

31.00

2/41

South Aust

11

20

-

1 269

258

1

6

4

63.45

1

-

295

8

36.88

3/54

Tasmania

5

5

-

751

369

-

1

3

150.20

2

-

21

-

-

-

Victoria

27

42

9

3 861

357

1

10

14

117.00

17

-

87

2

43.50

1/4

Western Aust

6

7

1

731

209*

-

-

5

121.83

4

-

5

-

-

-

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Total First Class career
statistics

234

338

43

28,067

452*

16

69

117

95.14

131

1

1367

36

37.97

3/35

These statistics are part of a comprehensive record of Sir Donald Bradman’s cricket career which appear in Roland Perry’s book The Don: a biography (Sydney, Pan Macmillan Australia Pty Ltd, 1995). Included in the 45 pages of figures in this book is every test innings the Don ever played in chronological order.