Sir Donald George Bradman Facts and Biography

Sir Donald George Bradman Facts and Biography

Sir Donald Bradman George is an Australian cricketer who is widely recognized as the greatest hitman of all time. Sir Donald Bradman was born in Cootamundra, New South Wales, Australia on August 27, 1908. He was the youngest of George Bradman who was a carpenter with his wife Emily Bradman. At first he and his family lived on Yeo Yeo, but when Bradman was 2.5 years old (1911) he and his family moved to Bowral because his mother's health deteriorated.

Bradman learned cricket from his uncle, George and Richard Whatman. He began practicing the throw by throwing a golf ball at a tank in his backyard. Stepping on teenagers, Bradman began testing cricket matches held every Saturday in his country. Here he starts to score a lot.

In 1926, the New South Wales Cricket Association, which was looking for a Bowlers, asked Bradman to play in a trial match. In the match, Bradman only managed to score a simple score. Even so, he still attracted public attention as a future player.

Bradman started playing cricket at a higher level by joining the St George club in Sydney (he later played for North Sydney after moving to Adelaide, South Australia and with the Kensington club in 1935). In 1927, Bradman played the first time for New South Wales against South Australia, where he also performed brilliantly. After a series of big scores at the start of the 1928-1929 season, Bradman was chosen to play Australia against English club Perry Chapman. In his inaugural match, Bradman performed poorly to slump to 12th.

He scored two centuries in the remaining time and established his position on the Australian team. Bradman's career did not always run smoothly, he was criticized extensively by the public because of Bradman's inadvertent style, and tended to pass the bat. However, Bradman answered his critics by consistently garnering a big score for 20 years in a career in the world of cricket. In 1936 Bradman was appointed Australian captain to compete against Gubby Allen club.

He continued to captain Australia until 1948, although having missed five years of cricket caused by World War II, Bradman remains the most successful captain. In 24 matches when Bradman was captain, the Australian team scored 15 wins, 3 defeats and 6 draws. After retiring, Bradman received his knighthood in January 1949. He was also elected chairman of the Australian Cricket Council. During his term as chairman, he made the decision to cancel the visit of the Australian cricket team to South Africa in 1971 as a form of opposition to apartheid politics that occurred there. Until 1973, Bradman also served as President of the South Australian Cricket Association. After truly leaving the world of cricket, Bradman began his career in the financial industry. He works for Hodgetts HW and Company on the Adelaide Exchange.

After his wife's death in 1997, Bradman began to seem to lose his enthusiasm. In 2000, he was hospitalized for pneumonia. Bradman returned to his home in the new year and died there on February 25, 2001 at the age of 92 years. A memorial service for Bradman was held on March 25, 2001 at Peter's Anglican Cathedral, Adelaide. The ceremony was attended by a number of old and present cricket players, Australian minister John Howard, leader of opposition party Kim Beazley and former Prime Minister Bob Hawke. This ceremony was broadcast live on ABC television for the public and watched by more than 1.45 million people.

Sir Donald George Bradman Facts and Biography
Google Doodle's Tribute Sir Donald George Bradman Today

A hero to Australian cricket fans, Sir Donald George Bradman, affectionately known as “The Don,” is considered the greatest batsman of all time. Born on this day in Cootamundra, New South Wales in 1908, Bradman developed his skills by hitting a golf ball off the curved base of a water tank, using a cricket stump, which is much narrower than a bat. The ball came back to him fast and at all angles. “I found I had to be pretty quick on my feet and keep my wits about me,” he said, “and in this way I developed, unconsciously, perhaps, sense of distance and pace.” Using his own unique grip and batting stance, he achieved a lifetime test batting average of 99.4, which many consider to be one of the greatest achievements by any athlete in a sport.

He made his debut in 1927 at 19 years old, in a first-class match between his New South Wales team and Adelaide, scoring a “century”—118 runs, to be exact—in his very first match. He was so talented and so consistent, he averaged at least one century every three innings over the course of his 21-year test match career. He amassed a total of 6,996 runs in 52 Test matches—making him a top contender for the title of best cricketer to ever step on a pitch. When Wisden Cricketers’ Almanack polled 100 former cricketers and journalists to determine the top cricketers of the 20th century, “The Don” was nominated by all 100. 

Through the 1930s and 40s, Bradman set the world standard in the sport, scoring 309 runs in one often-cited game at Headingley Cricket Ground in England. After his retirement he remained a fixture in the cricket world as an administrator and commentator. Bradman was honored with a museum during his lifetime, called the “the greatest living Australian” by the Prime Minister, and knighted in 1949. Despite the accolades he earned, he remained a courteous and modest man.

0 Response to "Sir Donald George Bradman Facts and Biography"

Posting Komentar