Bradman and the Indian connection (27 August 1999)
The man who averaged 99.94 in Test cricket celebrates his 91st birthday on Friday
27-Aug-1999
27 August 1999
Bradman and the Indian connection
Partab Ramchand
The man who averaged 99.94 in Test cricket celebrates his 91st
birthday on Friday. Maybe celebrate is not the correct word to go with
Donald George Bradman. He has been a recluse for so many years now
and did not really approve of his 90th birthday last year being
celebrated with a big bash. Of course he did not attend. He spent the
day quietly at home in Adelaide, his only public activity being to
receive two giants of the modern game, India's Sachin Tendulkar and
Australia's Shane Warne who were special invitees for the party.
Always a very private person, Sir Don became even more reclusive after
the death of Lady Bradman - Jessie to him - in 1997 after a
'partnership' that lasted 66 years. Tendulkar regarded the meeting
with Bradman as the greatest moment in his life. Particularly so since
it came in the wake of the great man having regarded the Indian
maestro as one ''who plays like me,'' as he told his wife after
watching Tendulkar on TV.
But then Bradman has always had a kind word for Indians. His only
visit to India came in the mid fifties when he and Lady Bradman made a
brief visit to Calcutta. I have seen a photo of the two of them
relaxing at Dum Dum airport in the company of Indian cricket
officials, including Pankaj Gupta, with whom Bradman maintained a
close relationship ever since 1947-48 when the first Indian team
visited Australia. And in his extremely readable autobiography
''Farewell to cricket'' Bradman has devoted a whole chapter on the
series with India, terming it as among the most friendliest and
enjoyable contests he was involved in. He is handsome in paying
tribute to Lala Amarnath, Vijay Hazare, Vinoo Mankad and Dattu
Phadkar, the successes of the tour. And he also makes a candid but
fair assessment of how, why and where the Indians failed. India, as it
may be recalled lost the five match series 0-4 but with the
Australians then being an all conquering side, the result was perhaps
expected and certainly no disgrace. The fact that Australia beat
England 3-0 the previous season and then went on to wallop England 4-0
during the 1948 summer will put the result against India in its true
perspective.
The series against India saw Bradman amass his usual quota of runs,
715 to be precise at an average of 178.75. He hit 185 in the first
Test at Brisbane, 132 and 127not out in the third Test at Melbourne
and 201 in the fourth Test in Adelaide. He retired with cramps after
making 57 in the fifth Test at Melbourne. His only failure came in the
second Test at Sydney when Hazare bowled him for 13. But Bradman will
perhaps remember the Indian tour most for the fact that he got his
100th hundred in first class cricket against the visitors. This was
while playing for an Australian XI in November and as he himself has
noted, it was a very special moment.
Among the innumerable fan mail that Bradman receives even now, many of
them are from India. Like in every cricketing country, Bradman is held
in high esteem in India by young and old. Two whole generations have
grown up in this country since Bradman's retirement from first class
cricket 50 years ago. But the countless cricket books, TV interviews
and the many videos about him have seen to it that Don Bradman will
have a never ending stream of new fans.
Source :: CricInfo365