Don Bradman In Memoirs Circa 1966

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  • čas přidán 25. 08. 2024
  • Excellent Documentary on The Don. Enjoy.

Komentáře • 51

  • @shakavarodi2245
    @shakavarodi2245 Před rokem

    No commercialization, cricket was at its golden age ❤

  • @kevinhisee4265
    @kevinhisee4265 Před rokem

    A great man on and off the field.

  • @dyasingh6291
    @dyasingh6291 Před 8 lety +9

    I lived in Adelaide for 23 years towards the end of the Don's life. No, never saw him except a couple of times on tv - very private person. In fact I did initiate a move to rename Adelaide as Bradman City.. There was support but the British loyalist types old foggies shouted that idea down. We did get Bradman Drive from the airport out. One story which is probably fabricated but good one - Bradman was asked whether he could still score that highly against the much faster and aggressive bowlers of today. His answer of course was no he couldn't . So the questioner remarked that today's bowlers are better than the bowlers of his time. The Don replied, "No. The fact is I am almost ninety years old now!". Thank you for your wonderful compilation!

    • @tjayenterprises5190
      @tjayenterprises5190 Před 4 lety

      @insane hermit that's the way they do it. They pour in.. And get inside then change it to how they want it

  • @kinezo1961
    @kinezo1961 Před 6 lety +20

    Sir Donald Bradman and I are cousins. His Father and my great grandfather were brothers.

  • @anoopkhandekar799
    @anoopkhandekar799 Před 5 lety +2

    Honour to watch the Doc.No doubt greatest of batsmen sir Don RIP love from India

  • @paulej2871
    @paulej2871 Před 10 lety +5

    I have never seen this film ....THANK YOU....I am a Bradman officiado....and this film is just brilliant

  • @shakavarodi2245
    @shakavarodi2245 Před rokem

    Wow what a sound of the bat❤❤❤

  • @sayeeshwargirish
    @sayeeshwargirish Před 12 lety +5

    don was the best in the world! all should take him as a role model!

    • @SilentHotdog28
      @SilentHotdog28 Před 4 lety +4

      He's not just the greatest Cricketer ever, he is the greatest Sportsperson ever.

  • @dontalon1109
    @dontalon1109 Před 12 lety +3

    wow .wonderful stuff

  • @venderstrat
    @venderstrat Před 5 lety +2

    Bradman hit fours, along the deck. They should do this today.

  • @Pihasanddunes1
    @Pihasanddunes1 Před 9 lety

    Great to see all too brief shots of Monty Noble and Clem Hill. Gold.

  • @note7849
    @note7849 Před 7 lety +1

    My child's friend sahib love Don bradman

  • @perpetualnotion7453
    @perpetualnotion7453 Před 8 lety +5

    Many years ago when Roger Federer was in Australia for the Australian Open, around the time Hewitt had beaten him in Davis Cup actually, some great cricket had been on as always leading up to the first tennis tournaments of the year. Federer being a very capable athlete and arguably one of the greatest tennis players, was taken to play a bit of cricket which he hadn't played before and not surprisingly was immediately very good at. Hand eye co-ordination is what it is. It was talking about in the commentary, his amazing prowess. As was the Aussie who was a professional golfer too. Not once have I ever heard those commentators compare them to or even mention how great Bradman was at various sports. Which in Australia seems, I don't know, quite unforgiveable. A chance to inform the listening public a little more about a great legend of Australian sport at the same time and keep the memories alive and going.

    • @tryarunm
      @tryarunm Před 6 lety

      Now that you mention it, we are reminded that sporting skills are generally universal, e.g. Compton, Fry, Botham, et al. The great Babe Ruth, I have read, on being introduced to cricket, chose a horizontal-bat stance and whacked the bowling all over. But Bradman's accomplishments in cricket were so exceptional - "as good as three batsmen" as his captain Woodfull said - that they shadow his humanity, the facts that he must have been competent at every other ball sport, that his sharp mind could have brought him a good living in any discipline available to him at the time.

  • @pastypower
    @pastypower Před 11 lety +3

    Never seen this before. Thank you for posting. If you've got any other Bradman stuff please share it on here :-)

    • @harrybridger9425
      @harrybridger9425 Před 6 lety

      THE REASON BRADMAN, MCABE, ORIELLY, MACARTNEY, PONDSFORD, HOBBS, BARNES HAMMOND, HUTTON & SUTCLIFFE & ALL THOSE BEFORE THEM ARE IN A HIGHER CLASS THAN THE CRICKETERS OF TODAY IS THAT THEY PLAYED AGAINST THE BEST PLAYERS IN THE WORLD ALMOST EVERY TEST SERIES. NO MINNOWS BACK THEN, TODAY THEY REGULARLY PLAY A TEST SERIES AGAINST PLAYERS WHO ARE NOT GOOD ENOUGH TO PLAY EVEN FIRST CLASS CRICKET IN AUST. OR ENGLAND.

    • @xoticpenguin7234
      @xoticpenguin7234 Před 3 lety

      @phil are u still alive?

    • @pastypower
      @pastypower Před 3 lety

      @@xoticpenguin7234 I think so mate!

    • @xoticpenguin7234
      @xoticpenguin7234 Před 3 lety

      @@pastypower let’s go bro

  • @shakavarodi2245
    @shakavarodi2245 Před rokem

    Those days, players and umpires were fighting for pick the stumps after the match 😅😅😅

  • @janeeley1604
    @janeeley1604 Před 5 lety

    Don has no equal. But I am thinking I am in the shadow of another ledgend . SSNO1

  • @DayDreamHeros
    @DayDreamHeros Před 5 lety

    Bert Oldfield really looks like a modern Geoff Boycott

    • @dawndickson711
      @dawndickson711 Před 5 lety +1

      Nah , that is Geoff B. , can’t believe the similarity , Truely uncanny !

  • @paulej2871
    @paulej2871 Před 10 lety +2

    37.....1st class double centuries........WOW......If you want to watch ONE THING.....watch his footwork....It is ASTONISHINGLY fast.......he reacts to the change of pitch and swing of the ball better and faster than anyone who has ever lived.
    George Headley (West Indies) played bad pitches better than the Don.....but the Don had a much better 200+ run scoring record......Bradman actually thought Headley was the next best batsman after him.

    • @tryarunm
      @tryarunm Před 6 lety

      At least 2 biographies of the Don state very clearly that he never applied himself on sticky dogs, realising that they came but once in a while and deciding that he would rather not waste his energies on them.
      My own surmise is
      1. he feared falling ill (for he had a sensitive constitution) and just before the 1932-33 series had just come off a gruelling tour to the USA
      2. he realised that he had no need to impress anybody, being already universally recognised as the pre-eminent batsman of all time
      3. he would rather expend his energies on learning and practising stock-broking, which profession he chose to make a respectable living from.
      Had Bradman been born a century earlier, and had played alongside WG, he might have found the need to assert himself as a player for far longer. So too had he been born in the time of Victor Trumper.

  • @tryarunm
    @tryarunm Před 6 lety

    Disappointing to see the players' avarice for stumps and bails as soon as the last wicket falls. That aside, Arthur Morris stating that Bradman was a 'fine' player after the war is a bit fatuous. Wish we had more film of Bradman batting. And that sound of bat striking ball rings a bit hollow.

    • @MadCuz69
      @MadCuz69 Před 3 lety

      "First in, best dressed" once had genuine meaning... even the umpires took them! Good example of how our morals have changed since then.

  • @petefromoz7053
    @petefromoz7053 Před 4 lety +1

    Bradman never shared any of the 1,000 quid with his team mates. 1,000 English pounds was an absolute fortune in 1930. As an administrator for the Australian Cricket Board and SACA he was a tight bastard. It was because of him World Series Cricket started because the players were being paid peanuts. He was hated by many team mates including Victor Richardson and Bill O'Reilly.

  • @tate477.
    @tate477. Před 4 lety

    King cole died from a cof

  • @Grizzbiz57
    @Grizzbiz57 Před 4 lety +1

    The Don's stats are quite misleading. Correct me if I'm wrong but I don't believe he played test cricket in either India, Pakistan, South Africa or the Caribbean. He never dealt with Delhi belly or some of those dodgy strips in those countries. He only played on the best wickets of the time. Shane Warne is the best Australia has produced. He could take wickets anywhere. Bit of a rascal but the finest spin bowler ever. The Don, in the administrative role on the ACB also showed little empathy to those encountering issues in India such as the sub standard food and accommodation. Personally, I like a warts and all doco on the chap; not to slaughter him ... I just think it's a bit of a fantasy story.

    • @marknorris1381
      @marknorris1381 Před 2 lety

      This isn't Shane Warne hiding under a fake name by chance? Shane Warne would be the only person other than a seriously deranged, delusional and disturbed inmate from a mental hospital that would say Shane Warne was the best Australia has produced, over Bradman.

    • @marknorris1381
      @marknorris1381 Před 2 lety

      By the way, Australia didn't 'produce' Bradman. He was a genuine freak. Where he was born or came from had nothing to do with it. He could have quite easily been born on the sub continent, UK, anywhere. Just a fluke it was Australia.

    • @johnnicholson956
      @johnnicholson956 Před 2 lety +1

      Bit of a silly statement. Pakistan did not exist as a country and Australia never toured India in Bradman's time.

  • @joevandijk2284
    @joevandijk2284 Před 5 lety +3

    People should check BRADMANS average during the body line series and watch (cricket Archives hosted by the ABC replays on how he played LARWOOD (please don't cry). It is embarrassing. REMEMBER Bradman faced one fast bowler in the series or a test not 3 or 4 fast bowlers as is today in the one team all after each other. Imagine turning your back and accept getting hit in the back against current test bowlers. The man had absolutely no idea in how to play just one single fast bowler in a game Best of all in his days he never faced any of the countries who are playing cricket today. God help us if he faced current indian and Pakistan spinners . Archives will show LARWOOD and other fast bowlers were nothing more than medium pace bowlers. CHECK THE FACTS. It's nice to have a legend but not one that is created by the press. PLEASE PLEASE don't compare him to other batsmen since the sixties

    • @jasonallen7607
      @jasonallen7607 Před 5 lety

      Totally agree about Bradman but Larwood medium pace?

    • @joevandijk2284
      @joevandijk2284 Před 5 lety +1

      The term fast bowler is a term too frequently used with today bowlers. They use fast bowler term if you bowl one and awhile around 145kph and above. BUT there average is in the high 130 kph. for the day.

    • @jasonallen7607
      @jasonallen7607 Před 5 lety

      @@joevandijk2284 i wonder what Larwoods speed was going off interviews from players who faced him do you not think he would have been touching those figures?

    • @focusdecorating3637
      @focusdecorating3637 Před 4 lety +5

      Bradman played on uncovevered pitches. Its laughable that you say the bowlers were not as fast....the pitches were so slow back then thats why they look so slow. Richie Benaud says Frank Tyson was the quickest he has ever seen. The facts are no one back then was averaging as high as Bradman and no one is now, I have helped with a study on this for a book and it was because of how he batted which set him apart fro the rest.
      Bradman still averaged 50 in the bodyline series by the way !

    • @focusdecorating3637
      @focusdecorating3637 Před 4 lety +3

      @@jasonallen7607 Larwood was easy an 80-90mph merchant for sure, he looked quick ! His career wickets at first class level was 1427 at an average of 17.51 ! This was obviously an era bowlers dominated

  • @chashdeveloper
    @chashdeveloper Před rokem

    His bat swing is really good. No wonder he made so many runs