Would Sir Donald Bradman still be the God of Cricket in the modern day?
@onztufan8287 ай бұрын
The Don! Greatest to ever do it! Amazing story towards the end with Jeff Thomson! The photo @ 9:40 is exactly how i had pictured him belting those lads around at 70 years of age fully suited 😂 Fantastic!
@strongnon-theist42117 ай бұрын
Can you make a same video on sir George headley?
@allankelso3 ай бұрын
YES
@abvll50493 ай бұрын
Of course
@Bugworldchronicles3 ай бұрын
He would have been something else in this modern era imagine he didn't have any protected gear in those days if he had protected gear I think he would have averaged 200 right now in our era just simply unbelievable
@Nomad111.2 ай бұрын
To be able to watch this footage with such ease is truly a privilege of the modern era.
@andrewmackinnon82522 ай бұрын
I wrote to The Don (care of the South Australian Cricket Association) when I was a kid, asking for an autograph. That was mid 90s. He sent me back a photo and autograph. Also happy I kept the envelope, as it was his handwriting on it. He did it all. In cricket and in retirement. One of the few genuine heroes of the world. He’ll always be remembered and revered.
@FoobasSports2 ай бұрын
@@andrewmackinnon8252 Amazing!
@rrao79632 ай бұрын
Worlds greatest batsmen sir don Bradman no body could match his charisma sir Gary sobers came close
@mattykay7852Ай бұрын
I was a huge fan too I grew up in the 70’s -80’s and I wanted one The Don I practiced everyday and played heaps of cricket 🏏 But I was hopeless 😂 My highest score was 10😄 I absolutely loved bodine the series I remember it coming in the TV in the 80’s
@JaydenLawson19 күн бұрын
Great story. That photo is priceless.
@RIP_Hareesh14 күн бұрын
@@andrewmackinnon8252 how Lucky u r!!
@TheTigers000013 ай бұрын
You read and hear everyday GOAT this and GOAT that. Then, when you are really really serious and want to find the real GOAT of any sport, you bring out the name Sir Donald Bradman. He dominates statistically his sport by such a margin, that there is no one that that is within any reasonable distance from him. A genius. A phenomenon. A once in several lifetimes champion.
@gnomevoyeur3 ай бұрын
If you consider cue games as actual sports (which is a contentious proposition), Walter Lindrum dominated Billiards to a similar degree.
@StopTheRot3 ай бұрын
And Eddie Merckx (until Tadej Pogacar).
@Power_Prawnstar3 ай бұрын
In speedway at the moment we have the Actual GOAT of our sport operating at the moment, he might get somewhere near the Don by the time he's finished. Bartosz Smaerlik. 5 world titles and hes not even 28 yet. He's got 5 more in him and that would put him nearly up there with the Don. As the next best is 6, he's does 5 in a row.
@Inevitable_Annihilation3 ай бұрын
Only against a few teams on a few pitches.
@FuriousPixel1233 ай бұрын
The GOAT is greatest of ALL time
@kerrymattrobertsharris67073 ай бұрын
Bradman lost 6 years through his prime to the war. If he'd played through those years he would have averaged well over 100 for his career. If he'd played in our modern times with better pitches he would have averaged around 110. He wasn't a god of cricket, he was just a man. A man that was twice as good at batting than everyone else. He is statistically the greatest sportsman there ever was, or ever will be.
@mukundr12043 ай бұрын
@@kerrymattrobertsharris6707 even with a curtailed career, he has 12 x 200+ scores. A feat yet to be surpassed. Sachin played 200 tests, couldn’t top him.
@vedprakashshrivastava56423 ай бұрын
@@mukundr1204that was the era of bowling without skills
@ariestiger123 ай бұрын
@@vedprakashshrivastava5642 stupid comment, by that logic every batter in that era would have a record like Bradman, yet none of them even came close
@ayushjoshi86673 ай бұрын
@@vedprakashshrivastava5642huh? They were still bowling close to 150kmph and were bowling close to off stump at a good length and also had much scarier bouncers because there were no helmets. The pitches would have been way harder to bat on too. With no covers the amount of cracks and moisture would move the ball of the pitch like crazy.
@vedprakashshrivastava56423 ай бұрын
@@ayushjoshi8667 No need to get carried away in emotions... There was not a single bowler who had pace of even close to 145... Yes circumstances were much difficult.. Pitches were not so easy to score free runs...
@Terrilliser2024OZ3 ай бұрын
His bat speed to play the shots is phenomenal.
@mukundr12043 ай бұрын
2.4 lb bat likely. I reckon the power of his shots would have easily matched any modern power hitter, he relied purely on handspeed and timing. 7000 runs almost with only six 6's is proof!
@jzzquant3 ай бұрын
backin the day bats were very thin you needed that kinda speed . controlled/compact power hitting form wrists at the last moment combined with precise timing. SHoulders/arms were less used unlike modern aussie technique much of the power hitting came from forearms and wrists.
@Sarang.Chaudhari3 ай бұрын
Indeed. And it comes when you have ample time to play the stroke. All about timing.
@Terrilliser2024OZ3 ай бұрын
Thanks all, very informative replies and I am aware of such things as lightweight bats of the era, more direct wrist-controlled power etc.
@Terrilliser2024OZ3 ай бұрын
@@mukundr1204 He scored a few 6's in a match against England.
@onztufan8283 ай бұрын
Growing up a Windies fan - With Sachin & Lara as my 2 all time Favs..... If they both say Bradman is the greatest with the respect - awe & admiration they have for him is MORE than enough for me to agree! Greatest Cricketer Bar None!!!!
@FoobasSports3 ай бұрын
Amen.
@nonamewillbegiven12173 ай бұрын
@@onztufan828 no one cares trolll
@ajinsal96973 ай бұрын
@@onztufan828 because they give respect to their senior batsman. That's all. But broadman is not the best
@nish15023 ай бұрын
@@nonamewillbegiven1217 you cared enough to comment, clown
@nish15023 ай бұрын
@@ajinsal9697 nope, they say it because they understand cricket. Bradman is an undisputed GOAT of test cricket batting.
@rocknral3 ай бұрын
Of all the GOATs of every sport, this man is the GOAT of GOATs. Nobody else is statistically TWICE as better than the other greats. No easy runs, postage stamp grounds, no covered pitches, no Zimbabwe, Bangladesh or other less established teams to plunder.
@educationworld96993 ай бұрын
Man 😂😂 India, West Indies, and NZ were at the same level as Zimbabwe and Bangladesh. Nonetheless, Don Bradman was the greatest cricketer, and I am not a fan of downgrading Don Bradman's records just because he played most of his matches in only two places. However, you are degrading great cricketers now.
@jackbolland-tw6mi2 ай бұрын
Phil Taylor of Darts is worth a mention but Don Bradman is definitely the GOAT of team sports. In football (Soccer) there are so many, that it’s completely subjective, there are 5 genuine contenders in; Messi, Maradona, Pele, Cruyff and Ronaldo but not one that stands above all the others with all context and factors considered. Basketball it’s almost universal that Michael Jordan is the greatest though I don’t watch basketball and American/ Australian rules football I have no idea probably meaning there’s no definitive GOAT that stands out as much. Though that might be my ignorance.
@rayanthonyjohnhuybertsz6735Ай бұрын
Nothing special, if he was playing now ,would have a average about 40
@svejIebwАй бұрын
@@rayanthonyjohnhuybertsz6735 interesting. Then why, pray tell, did no other batter of that era have an average close to his? Assumption without reason is delusion.
@mountainman066Ай бұрын
@@rayanthonyjohnhuybertsz6735Did you not pay any attention during this video even?
@aussierhino4713 ай бұрын
Even his running between wickets was elite. Not only did he always run the first run hard, but, in any video I ever saw of him, he NEVER turned blind - he would transfer the bat to his other hand so as to face the fielder when touching the bat on the ground to turn for the next run. These are things that were drummed into us as junior cricketers. But it shows that the greats also do the 'little things' - what we call the 'one percenters' - well. This 'real time' footage also shows how fast he really was between wickets, which fascinated me. My late father must have been a fan of the Don, because I vividly remember him telling me when I played junior cricket that 'if you don't hit the ball in the air, you can't get out 'caught''.
@FoobasSports3 ай бұрын
@@aussierhino471 Absolutely. It's amazing advice, isn't it? So profound. Your old man must've had a great cricket mind.
@aussierhino4713 ай бұрын
@@FoobasSports Thank you, he did. He played District cricket in his youth and opened the batting once playing for Collingwood 2nds with a very young Keith Stackpole, and later played VJCA top grade cricket at Highett where he opened the batting with 16yo Davenell Whatmore. I was the scorer at Highett (I was 11 or 12 years of age) and loved watching Dav destroy any short ball he received. Great days.
@jsmr4512 ай бұрын
The 3 he ran at 4:40 or so is incredible. He ran the first pretty quick probably thinking an easy 2. But realised 3 was on and turned and hammered the 2nd to turn safely for the 3rd also knowing the ball would come to the bowlers end so his batting partner was safe at the other end. Brilliant!
@rrao7963Ай бұрын
@@jsmr451he never got padded by the ball and his strike rate I calculated 68 even now in test it is outstanding
@TylerDurden-cu6iz19 күн бұрын
The majority of number 11 batsmen in club cricket don't never turn blind. That's not the thing we should be impressed by lol
@cameronsongs3 ай бұрын
Truly mythical! The greatest of all time who also replied to every fan letter that was ever sent to him. Super human bat speed and footwork. One of the reasons i've always been proud to be an Australian is because of the Don!
@Pid753 ай бұрын
To be that far ahead of the next best person in elite sport is unfathomable.
@Bernie83302 ай бұрын
Only, he isn't.
@Pid752 ай бұрын
@ Please explain?? He averages 99, the next best is just over 60.
@Bernie83302 ай бұрын
@@Pid75 It doesn't go on average. Averages are bloated by not outs and superfluous colossal scores in meaningless situations. Consider it explained.
@Pid752 ай бұрын
@ ok, so what are you basing it on? I don’t have the stats but I suspect his centuries/innings ratio is much better than everyone else too.
@Bernie83302 ай бұрын
@@Pid75 The bowling he faced was mostly nothing like it would be in ensuing decades, bar bodyline, one bowler basically, Larwood, and Bradman proved himself a coward. Pitches were roads and tests were timeless. Almost all of the matches he made his colossal sized tons in would have been pointless high/mammoth scoring draws any time post 1970ish.
@carloswray6023 ай бұрын
How can u not listen to Jeff Thomason’s recollections and not smile! 😊👌
@jonglewongle34383 ай бұрын
I remember in the 1990s that he [ Jeff Thomson ] gave an audio account on radio of his own last-wicket stand in a Test versus England, and that apparently was a winner with the radio audience, going by feedback at the time.
@MichaelAngeles-dn9ne3 ай бұрын
Any interview with Thommo is good value
@AmitKumar-nq7wk3 ай бұрын
Aussie accent is hard to pick sometimes. Couldn't understand what he was saying. Must have been a fun story
@BrendanColley2 ай бұрын
@@AmitKumar-nq7wkDon Bradman is from Bowral just south of Sydney and at that time many Australians sounded half British. We’ve lost some of our British accent as time has gone on.
@BarkerT23 күн бұрын
@@AmitKumar-nq7wkBasically said the 70 year old Bradman faced up with no protective equipment and thrashed two young pace bowlers around, not missing anything. Thompson only bowled spin to him, but was amazed by his ability to play like that at 70.
@michaelhorn72903 ай бұрын
My grandfather watched him bat a few times. He fondly remembered how Bradman would always hit the ball along the ground.
@tazzer69593 ай бұрын
My grandad watched him at Headingley in 1948, he said he was brilliant, a very small man, but batted super aggressively, and hit the ball in the air a lot…he did in the video if you watch it
@sammy_dogАй бұрын
my old man- saw him once Bradman was in his last year of cricket he was out for a rare duck🤦
@PeterTainui3 ай бұрын
Modern coaches would probably coach his "technical flaws" out of him. The way he held his bat, lifted it, played across the line - the very things that made him a genius should be the standard in batting. The Bradman Way should be how they coach young players. I remember watching a doco on him where he was asked why he played the cross wicket slog to cow corner so often and his answer was something along the lines of "well there are no fielders there so how else am I going to hit the ball there"
@richardgillies87942 ай бұрын
I thinking the exact same thing. Some of his batting actually would not look out of place in modern T20s, especially that shot that you refer to.
@ronbou47282 ай бұрын
I lot of people tried to correct his technique back then as well but he understood his game so would listen politely then continue on as he had.
@gigachad59312 ай бұрын
South africans style of batting is very similar to his style
@MrAdriaxe2 ай бұрын
Bradman noted that both he and his wife saw close similarities between his batting and that of Tendulkar.
@tasallp16 күн бұрын
Thought the same. Looked like a golf iron shot from some angles
@balaloveschelseaАй бұрын
What I see is someone with extraordinary footwork. He reaches the ball perfectly, ball after ball. That’s what modern cricket is missing.
@jonrichardson84613 ай бұрын
Great footage. Really shows his lightning wrists and footwork. Thommo’s anecdote underscores just how good the Don must have been - he wasn’t quick to praise anybody.
@FoobasSports3 ай бұрын
It's probably the best anecdote of any athlete I've ever heard.
@UdayshankerKalikiri2 ай бұрын
If I had to time travel to watch cricket i would go to the don bradman's era and 1970's west indies era just to experience the aura around them.
@phillipgraham42263 ай бұрын
Its the best picture quality I have seen of Bradman
@fosdyke714 ай бұрын
Love the enhanced video. Hopefully technology will only get better and we'll get a real sense of what it was like watching some of past legends play
@johnarmstrong31402 ай бұрын
When I was a student at the Sydney Conservatorium of music, the bassoon professor (Gordon Skinner ) mentioned he met the Don at the Adelaide Oval. When the Don discovered that Gordon was at that time, principal bassoonist in the Adelaide Symphony Orchestra, he asked him why the opening bassoon solo of Stravinsky's "The Rite of Spring" was considered difficult. Not many people know that)
@nickvegas24593 ай бұрын
I was interested in Bradman since the mid 70s. Form what I understand it was his mind more than anything. Other players have averaged a hundred over a year, but he did it over 20 years and 95 in first class cricket, that is the important figure.
@almac92033 ай бұрын
It was also the insane hand eye coordination.
@Abhijot2512093 ай бұрын
That was actually amazing to watch this clear footage of Sir Don!
@HHM7063 ай бұрын
My Dad saw Bradman play in 1948, he said the only batsman who was comparable in the modern era was Tendulkar.
@kouta432102 ай бұрын
Still not really a fair comparison. Bradman had twice his average.
@ErichBryson2 ай бұрын
@@kouta43210 can you see the level of bowling and lack of competition too....sachin played against more deadly bowlers
@kouta432102 ай бұрын
@@ErichBryson Absolute nonsense. What a ridiculous and baseless claim.
@ErichBryson2 ай бұрын
@@kouta43210 how baseless...cant you see the level of bowling by yourself...such small runup...such less flex action....how can that ball have speed....sachin faced much deadly bowlers and that too in bowler friendly conditions...!!!
@kouta432102 ай бұрын
@@ErichBryson Just more ridiculous baseless and biased speculation. You sound like the majority of Indian cricket supporters.
@nsgirish3 ай бұрын
What GREAT Picture quality and Background Music and Commentary and that aura !!! Instantly transported me to Bradman's time
@alexbarn3 ай бұрын
Thank you for making this…gave me a novel way of appreciating DB even more!
@FoobasSports3 ай бұрын
🙏🙏🙏
@maheshbalasubramaniam4663 ай бұрын
Hearing Thommo about the Don No gear, not played for 30 years but still whacked the ball. Look at their gloves, pads, outfield, the uncovered pitch. You have to doff your hat to all those who played in that Era. But amongst them all was one "Untouchable". Till date, he is just that. A sporting genius. Once a Don always the Don.
@potvalor13 ай бұрын
Exactly...the last of the classic batman was Sunil Gavaskar (i think). Remember, who faced the four pacer of West Indies in 1970-80, without helmet.
@almac92033 ай бұрын
@@potvalor1Richie Richardson was batting in the 1990s with a floppy hat. Batting without a helmet teaches you proper technique.
@potvalor13 ай бұрын
@@almac9203 correct. I 👍correct
@Humanbeing012 ай бұрын
By watching glimpse of this video it looks like he was special. It was like he was showing ball coming in slow motion. Even in slow motion you could be confused or hesitate what shot and area would be better. But he was playing fearless and with full confidence and clarity. His records itself says he wasn’t normal but special god gifted.
@bigmax45643 ай бұрын
Brilliant video with the colourization breathing fresh life into the Don's technique. The hand-eye co-ordination and power from his timing is amazing. And then you have those deft back cuts and glances. The thing we forget about Bradman is that he was a quick scorer, without having to resort to Bazball-like tactics - he always kept the scoreboard ticking over. And he did that not just at Test level, but even moreso in the Sheffield Shield and first-class tour games. He wouldn't have succeeded in the modern game not because of quicker fast-bowling, different rules, etc, but more to do with the quantity of cricket. He suffered from a muscle-bone condition called fibrositis through much of his career, which restricted his effectiveness at times. The shorter seasons and reduced itineraries compared to these days prolonged his career. That said, with modern medical treatment and technology, maybe his ailment would not have been such a hindrance and could have been even a more prolific batsman. That's a scary thing to consider.
@utha26653 ай бұрын
But don't forget, modern days have modern medicine, there are far better treatments available for fibromyalgia (as it's known today) and he could have potentially played for a longer period and more frequently. And as I said to someone else, he adapted to the game better thatn anyone and that's what made him great and it would have translated to the modern game.
@flamingfrancis6 күн бұрын
That hand / eye co-ordination was not a natural gift. He worked his arse off to develop it. Vision can be found of him hitting a golf ball with a stump up against a corrugated concrete tank stand.
@bigmax45646 күн бұрын
@@flamingfrancis I disagree. Yes, he did have practice routine only in his early years with the cricket sump and golf ball which obviously honed his skills. You need to remember that he was also an excellent golfer, tennis player. He also played on uncovered pitches through almost all of his career.
@mragunathan16274 ай бұрын
Look at the power through the forearms. THats some unbelievable handspeed, all while keeping his shape. He would have absolutely demolished any attack today. He played on uncovered pitches, with no helmet. Uncovered pitches mean sticky wickets that seam and have unpredictable bounce. He averaged mid 50's during the Bodyline series, facing Harold Larwood who was measured at 155 kph, with NO helmet, and facing bowling that was trying to injure him. This man was the closest thing to having a supernatural ability. My guess is, he would have averaged easily 150+ had he played today. Easy peasy.
@Steve-u7u3 ай бұрын
He would have struggled against the Windies of the 70s and 80s. His short stature would have weighed against him versus Holding, Garner, Walsh and Ambrose. And besides he had a weakness against accurate right hand leg spin and left hand orthodox spin.
@mukundr12043 ай бұрын
@@Steve-u7uSunil Gavaskar did just fine against said bowlers and he was shorter than Bradman, on the basis of that, I disagree sir.
@carloswray6023 ай бұрын
As the game has moved forward, more test cricket was played…. He’d have played more cricket and properly evolved and adapted to being peppered with short pitched bowling
@networks24x733 ай бұрын
The fast bowling and it's variations evolved. Late swing, reverse swing evolved after his retirement. He is greatest but would have had 60+ average in modern cricket.
@mukundr12043 ай бұрын
@@networks24x73 that would be believable if the red ball has changed since when he played. I believe they used the Duke’s ball during his time. This ball has not changed at all for the 200 odd years of the companies history . So given that the ball is the same I don’t see how swing is going to be any different in the modern era in terms of difficulty to play . I would in fact argue in the opposite , he played on sticky uncovered wickets. This means excessive seam movement and unpredictable bounce. If a modern test match was to be played on such a surface, I doubt if it last two days.
@MichaelBurke-z9x3 ай бұрын
Brilliant video of the greatest, great story from Tommo to finish.
@FoobasSports3 ай бұрын
Incase people weren't believers after seeing the footage alone, Tommo's story just leaves no doubt that Sir Donald Bradman is the greatest Batsmen in history. I learnt he was a great fieldsman too, I perhaps could've added some footage of his fielding too.
@Steve-u7u3 ай бұрын
@@FoobasSports Greatest batsman.....nonsense, no such thing!
@FoobasSports3 ай бұрын
@@Steve-u7u The data would suggest otherwise. Everything else is just opinion.
@dmcguire702 ай бұрын
Uncovered pictures, narrow bats and un roped boundaries yet he still managed to average nearly 100 .amazing!
@midslam2 ай бұрын
If someone had have taught Sir Don to carry his bat when he ran, he would have avergaed 200. And if Sachin calls you the 'God of Cricket', you're something else and more. Thank you for remastering this brilliant footage. Blessed to be able to watch this, more so in such good quality.
@FoobasSports2 ай бұрын
@@midslam Thank you! Much appreciated 🙏🙏🙏
@swiftay122 ай бұрын
Thanx for the vid! He is the greatest, by far! A very interesting technique, able to whip the ball to all parts, looks like he didnt play with a straight bat too often, and hit the ball with power, fast hands, impeccable footwork and extremely fast between the wickets
@FoobasSports2 ай бұрын
@@swiftay12 🙏🙏🙏
@stevenW72943 ай бұрын
Watching these clips in colour, two things thst stand out are his bat speed and running between wickets, turning 1s into 2s by rinning hard and not turning blind. His grip meant he didnt play with an open face, so rarely nicked it and kept the ball along the ground. There's the argument that most bowlers (with exceptions like Larwood) were pedestrian, but the uncovered pitches etc sort of negates that. I was always fascinated by the Eddie Gilbert story though.
@FoobasSports3 ай бұрын
Apparently he was faster than Larwood according to the Don.. so much for not being good bowlers around.
@HHM7063 ай бұрын
I think Larwood was the only bowler who bothered Bradman
@carloswray6023 ай бұрын
Averaged 99 with a fence pailing as a bat too… nothing like the bats that resemble bazookas today!
@utha26653 ай бұрын
That's what a lot of people forget, they compare modern batsmen and the shots they play with how Bradman batted. Even bats of the 1990's are vasty different to modern bats. I remember my first oiled bat in the 70s and let me tell you, there wasn't much of a sweet spot.
@hasuramapa46393 ай бұрын
Imagine this man with one of those tree trunk of a modern bat. The carnage wouldve been unreal
@jonrichardson84613 ай бұрын
If we are going to round numbers up or down he averaged 100. (99.96). If he averaged 65.96 we’d say he averaged 66 every time.
@utha26653 ай бұрын
@@jonrichardson8461 It was 99.94, but point taken, it's a smidge off 100, it should be rounded up, lol.
@shreyansh4u5943 ай бұрын
@@hasuramapa4639everyone played with thin bats still avged higher on avg
@tommartin2423Ай бұрын
The Don's son John had polio as a youth, walking with calipers on his legs, but recovered to be State champion in track and field for the mens 400m. Good genes. The Don's diminutive figure somewhat concealed his superb athleticism.
@tilakpunjabi1423Ай бұрын
Watching Sir Donald bat is a real treat to watch... from Ace Cricket Founder,Surat, Gujarat India.
@peace2u9472 ай бұрын
that late cut off larwood at 6:58 for his ton is pure class, wen u r playing that shot off pace ur seeing the ball v clearly almost taking the piss tbh, best player of all time no question no debate.. bradman an unbelievable talent.
@Purple-f6d2 ай бұрын
That’s a great point
@coezi2 ай бұрын
The way Larwood is just feeling like he's a B grade school boy being used for the first 11's batting practice too...
@flamingfrancis6 күн бұрын
Much respect to Harold Larwood who broke the mould for quicks back then. He was a hard working coalminer with better than normal strength and didn't have much in the way of coaching manuals etc. Thought to bowl his best at 95mph. He moved to Australia after befriending some Aussie team members.
@PrasannaRAdv3 ай бұрын
Some really unseen videos of Don seen here . thanks for the upload!
@FoobasSports3 ай бұрын
You're welcome 🙏
@xasx99928 күн бұрын
The GOAT. Beautiful vid, hope it's never taken down.
@FoobasSports28 күн бұрын
@@xasx999 Thank you 🙏🙏🙏
@christianargentiTalkTV3 ай бұрын
Thank you for this video. Absolutely magnificent and befitting of the greatest there’ll ever be himself.
@FoobasSports3 ай бұрын
Thank you 🙏🙏🙏
@GamingParadise6303 ай бұрын
A player with this dedication and concentration at the time when some countries didn't even play cricket. That was a magical time and would never come back. No one can ever be like him. The GREATEST ever.
@AlManar472 ай бұрын
Look at the trigger movement, vertical bat speed and high bat swing... Such a joy to watch
@intermediatedcockney7787Ай бұрын
That late cut is something you don't see at all in modern cricket, such a sublime player.
@kalashumesh6143 ай бұрын
Sir Don, blessed with innate talent, was a hard task master. Single minded, tunnel visioned focus (intense concentration), highly competitive and a clever individual as he was very calculative in accumulating the runs and decimating the bowling attacks of the day. His body was in tune with the 'Flow state of the Mind'. A clear case of Mind over matter!! Cricket is lucky to have him right at the top. 🙏🇮🇳
@andyreeve38803 ай бұрын
Steve Waugh might have one of the the closest techniques to bradman of more recent great players. His stance, the quick hands and the way he cuts and breaks his wrists when driving.
@najeeves81713 ай бұрын
His technique looks to be a lot closer to Sehwag's (with a much better footwork, of course) than S. Waugh. I'm just blown away by the incredible bat-speed, use of wrists and his willingness to hit across the line. Just wow!
@ANOOPBAL20 күн бұрын
Bradman himself said his batting felt very close to Sachin!
@IMBATMANANDIMCOOL2 ай бұрын
It was more than having the physique and the eye for being a great batsman. Bradman also played the correct shots even on dot balls which saved his energy and allowed him to play massive innings.
@rajat79foryou29 күн бұрын
Those were the days when opposition players also clapped celebrating an opponent's 100 ,5fer or a 50 as if they were also paid to clap.Great footage. Lot of hard work has gone in to make it clear from the grainy footage it would have been. Privileged to see a clear footage of Sir Bradman's batting.
@rohanmarkjayАй бұрын
This old Cricket footage is Gold.
@OneFurlongTooLong2 ай бұрын
Looks great, thanks for putting this together. Nice choice of music too
@FoobasSports2 ай бұрын
Thank you very much 🙏🙏🙏
@bkkp54683 ай бұрын
He must have been able to assess a pitch extremely quickly and with great accuracy to be so consistent, and the level of concentration is almost unbelievable.
@OrbvsTomarvmАй бұрын
greatest sportsman of any sport, of all time. one of the greatest human beings ever to exist. i would have paid anything to watch the greatest bowler of all time (warne) duel with him.
@vetiarvind28 күн бұрын
Warne isn't close to being the greatest bowler with his average of 25. Malcolm Marshall, Muralitharan, Dale Steyn, Ambrose, Bumrah, Barnes were all superior to him in total wickets and average.
@OrbvsTomarvm27 күн бұрын
@@vetiarvind averages don't always tell the full story. barnes being the exception.
@Steve-u7u5 күн бұрын
@@OrbvsTomarvm So....why is Bradman the "greatest?" based on average, nothing else.
@sanjaymitra99972 ай бұрын
Great, fantastic footage. Thank you
@FoobasSports2 ай бұрын
@@sanjaymitra9997 Much appreciated 🙏🙏🙏
@The_Trinity_EffectАй бұрын
Rest in peace Sir Donald , you’ll be remembered for hundreds of years to come 🍻
@sagirparkar41152 ай бұрын
thanks for the wonderful work you have done on this video...
@FoobasSports2 ай бұрын
@@sagirparkar4115 Thank you🙏🙏🙏
@tonyroy81233 ай бұрын
Simply a legend forever, no other words.
@inefektАй бұрын
People might think his test record is an anomaly, a bit like the man who owns the second best test average of all time Adam Voges (test avg 61, first class avg 46) but he wasn't. In cricket, a player who has played a good amount of test cricket will usually end up with a career average +/- 5 runs from his first class average. Bradman averaged 99.94 in tests but he also averaged 95.14 in his entire first class career, scoring over 28k runs with 117 centuries. It was no fluke, he was truly that good. But also, in the nearly 100 innings he played during his Sheffield Shield career (Australian domestic first class competition) he averaged an astonishing 110. During the final calendar year of his test career in 1948, aged nearly 40 years, newspapers wrote about watching a player who was a shadow of a once great batsman. He had scored over 1000 runs that calendar year, the most of his entire career, at an average of more than 113. It makes you believe every word of that Thommo story towards the end of this video 😯
@thelong-termstockguy3 ай бұрын
The greatest batsman of all time. The most dominant player any sport has ever seen. Sir Donald Bradman.
@veneratedmortal4369Ай бұрын
This footage is great. I don't know much about cricket technique, but his balance and footwork look amazing. He is able to attack the ball like a snake.
@tylernich08483 ай бұрын
Very impressed with this footage
@hallu66663 ай бұрын
Actually this diminutive genius brandishes the willow cricket bat like a tennis racquet, which is much lighter. He wields his bat like a sword. Incredible! His record will never be broken.
@cryptic69172 ай бұрын
My grandfather’s favourite player, grandad said he was devastated whenever the Don got out
@bram994942 ай бұрын
His technique looks a little clumsy by modern standards, but his balance, bat-speed and stillness at the point of contact are truly impeccable
@markw65862 ай бұрын
Fantastic vlog. Has anyone dominated their chosen sport as much as The Don? Won't be another one like him.
@hasnatahmed496910 күн бұрын
Excellant foot work.
@markhodges127611 күн бұрын
One of the few sports where a sportsman who played 100 years ago would still just as likely be hugely successful today. Yeah the general athleticism has increased and maybe bowls are a little faster, but on the flip side the pitch quality and consistency of bounce has improved massively, and bat technology is out of this world even compared to 25yrs ago. I have no doubt Bradman would still be the goat if he played today in his prime.
@rhyshilders3 ай бұрын
The shot at 6:57 is one of my favourite Bradman shots. The most wonderfully powerful wrist flick for the late cut.
@beachhuntersouthafrica3 ай бұрын
Thanks for doing this video.. much appreciated!
@FoobasSports3 ай бұрын
@@beachhuntersouthafrica 🙏🙏🙏
@chriseyles2042 ай бұрын
Great piece about truly the greatest
@FoobasSports2 ай бұрын
@@chriseyles204 Much appreciated 🙏🙏🙏
@JasonTrussell-g5d2 ай бұрын
Simply the Best, never bettered and will never be equalled........Sir Donald Bradman.
@BarkerT23 күн бұрын
Yep, basically Wayne Gretzsky, Michael Jordan and Babe Ruth times 2.
@kriti89062 ай бұрын
What really impressed me is the scampering for singles and doubles in an era of laidback batting. That truly shows his hunger for runs
@stewartridgway51962 ай бұрын
Well said Thomo, great respect.
@monkeh8617 күн бұрын
The whole legend of Bradman is so insane. To be that far ahead of any of the batsmen that came before or after him is nuts.
@christophervan69663 ай бұрын
Seldom, if ever, in any sport, is there anyone so completely undisputed as the greatest ever, as is Sir Donald in cricket.
@motosyncr2 ай бұрын
just the footage is pure gold to see all those playing early days of cricket , current generation can laugh about it as I can see in the comments but there will be a day when our future generations will laugh at us
@thegooddays98343 ай бұрын
thought he played pinball cricket but enhanced videos shows he played some hell of a cricket
@bipolarbear9917Ай бұрын
Simply phenomenal! 🤔
@huepix3 ай бұрын
Facing bowlers just as fast as todays, on dodgy pitches, with no helmet, no chest pads, virtually unpadded, gloves, and it looks like no thigh pads. And the boxes were completely inadequate. Those boys had some courage.
@d_trizzy17 күн бұрын
Fantastic quality. Great video
@FoobasSports17 күн бұрын
@@d_trizzy Thank you 🙏
@jonglewongle34383 ай бұрын
80 innings from 52 Tests, including 10 not-outs, for 70 times dismissed for 6,996 runs. So that he was 4 runs lacking to close on an average of 100. So, actually, had he not come out to bat for his last innings then he'd have averaged a tick over 100. So, actually, he did average 100, but only for as much as at least 69 innings, but not also for 70 innings.
@wildwallaby6992 ай бұрын
The GOAT of all goats. Statistically he surpasses everyone in any sport!!! He used to train himself by hitting a golf ball against a corrugated water tank standing like a metre or two away...WTF... Just amazing!
@relevantbrother89643 ай бұрын
The speed of his hands and footwork was simply astonishing. He had very quick hands but also very deft,the stroke at 7:00 off Larwood so indicative.Almost like playing a spinner. Like a top guitar player,the tone is in the fingers,the touch that these top batsmen have is on another level. Such small bats ,big outfields as well.
@Jasper9000-wd5sm9 күн бұрын
About the only record Bradman didnt break was most career runs, he overtook Jack Hobbs but never caught Wally Hammond A few interesting facts about Bradman that are often missed.... 1.On his debut in 1928 Australia suffered the biggest thrashing ever, losing by a massive 675 runs, the record has never been beaten 2. Bradman was supposed to bat at 6 on his debut but as wickets tumbled late on day 2 his NSW teammate Charles Kelleway was sent in ahead of him as nightwatchman, allowing Bradman to wait until the next morning to bat. Both Kelleway and Jack Gregory were badly injured in the match and forced into immediate retirement 3.He was relegated to 12th man the next match, the man who replaced him was Vic Richardson who would go on to have 3 grandsons that would represent Australia - the Chappell brothers Early on day 1 Bill Ponsford copped a broken wrist from a ball from Larwood which retired him for the season., so Bradman had to field for the entirety of both of Englands innings - a whopping 279 overs 4. Bradman was never dismissed in the 90s, nor the 190s, but he was left stranded on 299 when his partner Pud Thurlow was run out. Thurlow was dropped and never played again 5. Methods of dismissals remain unchanged except for one thing - wicketkeepers made 2-3 times as many stumpings back then, perhaps due to the higher percentage of overs bowled by spinners, yet Bradman was never stumped, and he was run out only once
@flamingfrancis6 күн бұрын
And Victor Richardson would become Vice Captain to Bradman in the Bodyline Ashes Tests.
@JacktheBeard3 ай бұрын
I've sometimes thought to myself, he played 52 tests, if he played 100 or more as many players do these days, would he still have maintained such a high average? Then you look at his entire first class career - 234 matches, just over 28,000 runs, averaging 95. Simply phenomenal.
@jonglewongle34383 ай бұрын
His batting average in the Australian domestic first-class competition, the Sheffield Shield, was in the high 90s, maybe something like 97 or 98 [ without looking it up ], that being, not dissimilar to his Test average. I thus do not know that anyone has ever challenged his batting average at State level, never mind at Test level.
@joemercieca47943 ай бұрын
@@jonglewongle3438 Without looking it up I believe it was 110.12 for Sheffield Shield. Actually higher than his test batting average.
@joemercieca47943 ай бұрын
@@jonglewongle3438 Sorry, slightly wrong 110.19 run average in Sheffield Shield
@joemercieca47943 ай бұрын
@@jonglewongle3438 Bradman: 110.19 (96 innings) Barry Richards: 100.09 (12 innings) The third-highest average belongs to Bill Ponsford at 83.27 over 70 innings
@joshuasadler92433 ай бұрын
Crazy to think he missed his prime years due to the war. His current records are insurmountable as they are now but imagine him playing those years he missed and how many runs he would of had
@vibhuvikramaditya45763 ай бұрын
Amazing to Watch, Thankyou.
@FoobasSports3 ай бұрын
@@vibhuvikramaditya4576 Much appreciated 🙏🙏🙏
@megafauna83742 ай бұрын
I like how the Don would hook and pull the ball from well outside off stump. That was a no no when I was learning the game.
@Mymystery19673 ай бұрын
Supernatural cricketer.how did he do it ?.no doubt an amazing cricketer who would have been effective today as well as then.why?.he only hit 6x6’s in his whole test career,he always played shots down so no chance of catching him out,about 57% of all wickets are caught out so eliminating going for 6’s and a rock solid technique in attack and defence made him the consummate all round batting cricketer ,TOTAL LEGEND ❤
@RalphBrooker-gn9iv2 ай бұрын
Astonishing footage.
@Stephen-sr2pbАй бұрын
The bowlers in those days were very accurate. They very rarely missed the middle of Bradman's bat.
@BarkerT23 күн бұрын
And they often had him in two minds. Didn’t know whether to him them for four or six.
@mragunathan16273 ай бұрын
A lot of commenters speculating he would have struggled against high pace have clearly never faced such pacce themselves. If they had, they would know that 130 - 145 kph when it doesnt swing or seam isnt really that much harder to face, let alone score off. 130 kph with excessive seam movement would be nigh impossible to score off, than 150 kph with no swing or seam(ie most IPL matches). Some much needed context here. So yes, The Don would have had no problems against modern bowlers ;-) Anyone with even passing knowledge of the game from playing it, will know this.
@aniket3853 ай бұрын
He scored a Century against Bodyline Bowling against Harold Larwood and co on tricky wickets.... Look how modern day batsman collapse 36/10 or recent one against NZ . And since bodyline has been banned , the question is ....could modern day batsman play Bodyline on those wickets?
@ashwinchugh25273 ай бұрын
Most importantly look at bat... nowadays with thick edges you can score even if you mistime back in that time it was quite difficult to middle it too
@Uyou-op7ec3 ай бұрын
How about playing without helmet etc..i think most of the cricketers would die in the field.
@yadevolkram2 ай бұрын
@@aniket385 Stan McCabe made 180 or so in the Bodyline series. Higher than any innings score Bradman made.
@wyattderp58128 күн бұрын
I truly wouldve loved to see what Bradman would be like with todays, pitches, todays calibre of bowling, and todays equiptment. I Genuinely think with all the difficulties he faced compared to today, gear, pitches, training facilities, that he would have been just as good if not better. Amazing.
@childhealth5049Ай бұрын
Its awesome and at the same time terrifying for people of our generation to see how he is playing without a helmet, playing hook shots and pull shots on bouncers
@Tr33fiddy2 ай бұрын
Ladies and gentlemen, arguably the greatest sports person of all time.
@Richie.G.StringАй бұрын
Bradman played on uncovered pitches, there were no helmets, there were no ropes within the broader boundary, and most importantly, the bats back then were way less powerful compared to now. I doubt the bowling was any easier back then compared to now. Bradman was a freakish batsman in the most positive way.
@BanksyOz2 ай бұрын
was ahead of his time thats for sure and its great to see how far the game has come and improved since those days. Imagine Bradman with the training and facilities we have today. If he had those skills today hed be playing 3rd grade at your local cricket club if hes lucky
@jayannan98973 ай бұрын
From what I'm looking at he's playing shots that shouldn't be possible. He deserved the last 4 runs for the 100 average 👏👏👏
@alexwilliams42643 ай бұрын
The cricket gods weren't going to allow that.
@jayannan98973 ай бұрын
@@alexwilliams4264 gotta admit there's a bit of poetry about it. Probably a better legend this way✌
@utha26653 ай бұрын
@@jayannan9897 It kept him in the realm of humanity.
@jacobwatson605529 күн бұрын
He is without a doubt, the greatest sportsman ever. No one has over will be that far above the rest
@sportsfan2773 ай бұрын
Absolute phenomenon. Would have been far and away the best ever in any era. I would guess a average of around 80 ish in current era. Leagues above everyone, best ever by far.
@terrydoyle41203 ай бұрын
Can you beleive that Southend Council demolished the changing room where this genius prepared to play when the Aussies played in Southchurch Park back in the day. It should have been renovated with a huge plaque honouring the great man. Can you imagine how wonderful that would have been for the local cricketers?
@FoobasSports3 ай бұрын
Absolutely. What a terrible thing to do.
@iamkumarmihir3 ай бұрын
Sachin Tendulkar: Sir Donald Bradman God of Cricket ❤️🏏🙏