Bradman’s son astounded by affection surrounding Don

Son of the legendry batsman Don Bradman continues to be "astounded" by the amount of affection directed towards his late father. As the countdown begins to Don’s hundredth birthday on Wednesday, John Bradman spoke about the interest that surrounded the hero, cricketer, administrator and family member.

Adelaide, Aug 26:Zeecric Bureau

Son of the legendry batsman Don Bradman continues to be "astounded" by the amount of affection directed towards his late father. As the countdown begins to Don’s hundredth birthday on Wednesday, John Bradman spoke about the interest that surrounded the hero, cricketer, administrator and family member.
"We are extremely proud of him, proud of his achievements, but more proud of him as a person, for the way he coped with those achievements," John Bradman told the Australian media. "In that respect he was absolutely remarkable.

"We`re very touched that people continue to remember him as they do, so long after he retired from playing cricket. I suppose it does astound us, it always astounded him. He couldn`t understand why people still remembered him so long after he`d finished playing."

Bradman`s final Test occurred 60 years ago at The Oval, but his legend grew the longer his average of 99.94 remained so far out of reach of the game`s greats. He died in 2001 aged 92 and there was an outpouring of grief in Australia and other parts of the cricket-playing world.

On Wednesday John Bradman will attend a lunch at the Melbourne Cricket Club and a dinner in Sydney before visiting Cootamundra, the New South Wales town where the batsman was born in 1908, on Friday. Ricky Ponting is due to give the Bradman Oration at the function in Sydney while Bradman`s grand-daughter Greta will sing at both the major events to mark the centenary.

"It`s almost like he`s separate from the game," Australian captain Ricky Ponting said. "His name and what he achieved, it`s so far out of any player`s reach, in his time or any player who has played since, it`s almost like he played a different game to what we`re playing. He would have been the stand-out player whatever generation he played in."

Ponting met Bradman when he was a 15-year-old at the Academy in Adelaide. "It was an amazing experience," he said. "The first thing that struck you was his stature. He was quite a short, little guy and very quietly spoken. But everyone in that room was in awe and everyone was sitting on the edge of their seat taking in everything he would say."

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