Cricket Game Play Player Balls Bowl Bowler Catch Red Century Drive Duck Team Australia West Indies E #1 is a mixed media by Navin Joshi which was uploaded on February 10th, 2015.
Cricket Game Play Player Balls Bowl Bowler Catch Red Century Drive Duck Team Australia West Indies E #1
Cricket Game Play Player Balls Bowl Bowler Catch Red Century Drive Duck Team Australia West Indies English England India Pakistan Champion Sixer... more
by Navin Joshi
Title
Cricket Game Play Player Balls Bowl Bowler Catch Red Century Drive Duck Team Australia West Indies E #1
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Navin Joshi
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Mixed Media
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Cricket Game Play Player Balls Bowl Bowler Catch Red Century Drive Duck Team Australia West Indies English England India Pakistan Champion Sixer Boundry Oneday match Tournament Trophy Gosship Gamble
Around the time of the First World War, a young boy in the small Australian town of Bowral spent hours every day playing alone with a cricket stump, a golf ball and a water tank. He'd use the stump to hit the ball against the tank's brickwork base, and the golf ball would bounce back quickly at unpredictable angles. But the boy became so fast that he could hit the ball with the stump again and again without letting it touch the ground. The boy went on to use the quick reflexes and sharp eye he developed beside the water tank to become cricket's greatest batsman of all time.
Sir Don Bradman (1908 - 2001) played in 52 Test matches for Australia from 1928 to 1948. His Test batting average of 99.94 is generally regarded as one of the most remarkable achievements in any sport. The next best batting average for a player who has played more than 20 Test match innings is just 60.97 by South Africa's Graeme Pollock. Before his last Test match, at The Oval in London, Bradman's Test batting average was 101.39. But in his last innings he was bowled by the second ball he faced. If he had scored just 4 runs, his average would have been over 100, but having scored no runs, he finished his Test career with an average of 99.94 runs per innings. For many years it was claimed that the magnificent ovation Bradman received as he walked out to the pitch for his last Test match had left him with tears in his eyes, and the tears had made him miss the ball and "go out for a duck". Bradman always claimed there was no truth to this story.
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February 10th, 2015
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