The Don given the grandest of farewells
Sir Donald Bradman received the grandest of farewells Sunday night as family, friends and former foes joined ordinary Australians in tribute to a sportsman who changed a nation
AAP
25-Mar-2001
Sir Donald Bradman received the grandest of farewells Sunday night as
family, friends and former foes joined ordinary Australians in tribute to a
sportsman who changed a nation.
The man rated the greatest cricketer ever was hailed for his humility,
integrity and sheer sporting genius by a select 700-strong gathering inside
St Peter's Cathedral.
But foul weather reduced the crowd to about 3000 people at the adjacent
Adelaide Oval, the scene of many of Sir Donald's triumphs.
Officials had predicted as many as 40,000 people would converge at the
picturesque oval but consistent rain yesterday and today shrank crowd
numbers.
In a service televised live across the nation, and directly screened in
India, Sir Donald's son John - who once changed his name to avoid the glare
associated with his famous surname - delivered a moving tribute that
celebrated his father's life.
"Never in the slightest degree did he become his own hero," John Bradman
told the gathering.
The Bradman family had been "astonished and moved to see he has touched so
many lives" in the wake of Sir Donald's death at his Adelaide home on
February 25, aged 92.
John Bradman said changing his name to Bradsen in the 1970s was "an
extremely difficult time for me" but his father was most understanding.
"He never tried to talk me out of it," he said.
"The name change was really a case of like father, like son."
Sir Donald told his son not to revert to the surname Bradman for the cricket
great's sake "but in part I did and I know it warmed him".
John Bradman urged people not to treat his father as an icon.
"We mustn't be too serious about him and we mustn't treat him as a religious
figure," he said.
"Don't enslave him with worship."
Sir Donald had "foibles and contradictions like the rest of us", John
Bradman said.