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Nasser Hussain
Vijay Hazare
Vivian Richards
Great Sportsmen Aren't Perfect!
Farokh Engineer
Gundappa Viswanath
Glenn McGrath
Andy Roberts
Rahul Dravid
Kapildev Nikhanj
Syed Kirmani
Doug Walters
Fergie Gupte
Ladhabhai N. Amar Singh
Imran Khan Niazi
Adam Craig Gilchrist
VVS Laxman
Vishwanath's Humour
Geoff Boycott
Anil Kumble
On the other side of a slump is victory!
Richie Benaud
Shane Keith Warne
Kumar Shri Ranjitsinhji
Sir Donald George Bradman
Dilip Narayan Sardesai
Frank Mortimer Maglinne Worrell
Are you a Winner or a Quitter?
Garfield St. Aubrun Sobers
Dennis Keith Lillee
Sir Len
Summer Tips
Myth No. 10
Myth No. 9
Myth No. 8
Myth No. 7
Sir Neville Cardus
Dilip Balwant Vengsarkar
Myth No 6
Focus on Dreams
Martina Navratilova
Stephen Rodger Waugh
Myth No. 5
David Gower's Curry
Practice to Perfect!
Bhagwat Subramaniam Chandrasekhar
Myth No. 4
Myth No. 3
Failure
Anju George
Sanjay Vijay Manjrekar
Myth No. 2
Steffi Graf
Arthur Mailey
Laws of Success in Sport
Lala Amarnath
Myth No. 1
Sachin Slogs, but Smiles too!
Mansur Ali Khan of Pataudi
Mulvantrai Himatlal 'Vinoo' Mankad
Building Muscles
Intimidating Opponents
Muhammad Ali
Baichung Bhutia
Sandeep Madhusudan Patil
Finding Time
Derek Randall
Ronaldo
Sanath Jayasuriya
Stretching
Step outside comfort zone
Chris Evert-Mills
Ajit Laxman Wadekar
Stay in the Present
Pahelam Ratanji Umrigar
Pele
John McEnroe
Lance Armstrong
Marion Jones
Tiger Woods
Bob Beamon
Flexibility
Speed and Agility
Heart Endurance
Muscle Endurance
Muscle Power
Muscle Strength
Wilma Rudolph
Teofilo Stevenson
Sergei Bubka
Raymond Ewry
P.T.Usha
Paavo Nurmi
Naim Suleimanov
Nadia Comaneci
Milo of Kroton
Milkha Singh
Mark Spitz
Leander Paes
Lasse Viren
Johnny Weissmuller
Jim Thorpe
Jesse Owens
James B. Connolly
Irina Kirzenstein
Greg Louganis
Florence Griffith Joyner
Fanny Blankers-Koen
Emil Zatopek
Edwin Moses
Dick Fosbury
Dhyan Chand
Dawn Fraser
Daley Thompson
Carl Lewis
Bob Beamon
Babe Didrikson
Al Oerter
Abebe Bikila
Dhanraj Pillay
David Beckham
Serena Williams
Steve Ovett
Alec Bedser
Donald Bradman
You are Your Dreams
Leander Paes
Viswanathan Anand
Prakash Padukone
Sunil Gavaskar
Alan Knott
Godfrey Evans
Jeffrey Thomson
Mohinder Amarnath
Clive Lloyd
Javagal Srinath
Stanley McCabe
Michael Ferreira
Sourav Ganguly
Sachin Tendulkar
Trueman's Wit
Jesse Owens
Fred Spofforth & the Ashes
Enthusiasm
Inspirational Poem
Dhyan Chand

Donald Bradman


Charles, a farmer from the county of Suffolk in southeastern England migrated to Australia in 1852. Legend has it that he was transported Down Under for stealing sheep! Three quarters of a century later, as if to make up for the treatment meted out to his 'grandpa', a young batsman named Donald George began an assault on English bowlers that gave them insomnia for well nigh twenty years. By the turn of the half-century their self-esteem had been smashed to smithereens.
Donald George Bradman's test average against England was 89.78! Jim Laker, who once took 19 wickets in a test match against Australia, confesses that the great batsman gave him an 'inferiority complex'!
Douglas Jardine, one of those who suffered sleepless nights on account of the 'run machine', invented the 'Bodyline' theory to combat the genius of Bradman during the Ashes series of 1932-33, Down Under. By the high standards he had set for himself, 'The Don' was a failure in that series, for he averaged 'only' 56.57 in four tests! Compare this to great performers like Sunil Gavaskar, Viv Richards, Javed Miandad and others who have just managed to average around 50 runs per innings during their illustrious careers!
As a young boy, Bradman used to hit a golf ball against a brick wall in his garden with a cricket stump. Bill Bowes, the fast bowler who played for England in the 'Bodyline' series says that he once saw Bradman give a demonstration of bouncing a golf ball with a cricket stump. "He did it twenty times easily", he says. Bradman later informed him that he gets towards a century when his luck is in. "I found that other cricketers, when their luck was in, struggled to double figures," says Bowes.
By the time the 1948 tour of England came along - his last series - Bradman had become so popular that he received an average of 600 letters from his fans all over the world everyday. But one letter from a Dutch fan, with just his photograph pasted on the envelope and the words 'somewhere playing in England' which reached him, just goes to prove how well known he was. Despite all the adulation and recognition that has come his way, Bradman remained a modest man who cherished his privacy.
Notwithstanding what purists say about one-day cricket, the first limited overs international between Australia and England, in 1971, was played at the instance of Bradman, after the test match at MCG was abandoned due to rain.
Bradman was knighted in 1949, and received his country's highest honour, the Companion of the Order of Australia in 1981. In his last inning in test cricket, at the Oval in 1948, Eric Hollies bowled him off a googly with only four runs needed to possess a test average of 100. After that match he said to Wally Hammond, another great batsman, "If only I could have my time over again!"
Sir Donald died on 25 February 2001 at his Kensington Park residence in Adelaide, SA at 92, missing yet another coveted hundred!!


last updated on: 5/14/2021

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Dimdima is the Sanskrit word for ‘drumbeat’. In olden days, victory in battle was heralded by the beat of drums or any important news to be conveyed to the people used to be accompanied with drumbeats.

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Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan
K. M Munshi Marg,
Chowpatty, Mumbai - 400 007
email : editor@dimdima.com

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Dimdima.com, the Children's Website of Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan launched in 2000 and came out with a Printed version of Dimdima Magazine in 2004. At present the Printed Version have more than 35,000 subscribers from India and Abroad.

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