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Bradman was truly the Don Could it be ? Rate Topic: -----

#1 User is offline   Silver Surfer 

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Posted 08 February 2010 - 01:00 PM

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Bradman was truly the Don

  • By Andrew Carswell

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Godfather of the game ... the world's greatest cricketer, Don Bradman, was of Italian stock. Here is the Don at his 1948 Testimonial and (inset) his great-grandfather Emmanuel Danero. Source: The Daily Telegraph

CRICKET may not even rate a mention in soccer-crazed Italy, but it does have a profound link to the sport's greatest champion.

Our Don Bradman had Italian blood, with his great-grandfather Emmanuel Danero (aka Neich) in 1826 becoming one of the first Italians to migrate to Australia.

You can learn about your own heritage with our Origins magazine.

The revelation of the late Don's Italian ancestry, of which even the Don Bradman Museum was unaware, comes in a book on Danero's quirky life by author Lina Moffitt.

Ms Moffitt told The Daily Telegraph the link was extraordinary and showcased the depth of multiculturalism in Australia.

"It will come as a shock to most people because most would think Bradman came from a long English line, considering he was such a gifted cricketer. Cricket is not a sport you associate with Italy," she said.

Born in the bustling Italian port of Genoa, Danero sailed the world from the age of 12 before coming to Australia as a free settler, where he turned his hand to hotels, holding the licence for the Old Black Dog Hotel in Sydney's The Rocks and Burwood's Bath Arms.

But business was not the only thing Danero excelled at – he fathered 25 children and outlived three wives.

On September 4, 1871, Danero's daughter Sophia Jane Neich, whom he fathered illegitimately, gave birth to Emily Whatman – the mother of Don Bradman.

As Danero, who was well groomed and very popular with the ladies, fathered children into his late 70s, four of Bradman's great aunts and uncles are still alive.

One of those aunts, Veronica Lees, and her son Anthony said yesterday it was wonderful to be connected to two amazing men.

"It is quite unbelievable really. I used to brag a bit to my old school mates of my Bradman heritage," Anthony, a chartered accountant, said.

"I guess only Don's close family would know about his Italian connections. When I was a little boy, my family used to tell me many stories about my great grandfather.

"He was a great man and an accomplished man, just like his famous great grandson."

The family home of Danero, who died in 1893, 15 years before Bradman was born, still stands at Concord and is heritage-listed by the National Trust .



http://www.dailytele...0-1111113043410

This post has been edited by Silver Surfer: 08 February 2010 - 01:01 PM

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#2 User is offline   staringclown 

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Posted 08 February 2010 - 01:07 PM

And he never shouted the team a beer
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#3 User is offline   Silver Surfer 

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Posted 08 February 2010 - 01:22 PM

Sir Donald Bradman: A Tribute

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#4 User is offline   Bernard L. Madoff 

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Posted 08 February 2010 - 01:41 PM

The Don was a Don! Cool:laugh:

I have a shelf of books on Sir Donald George.

What a machine with a bat.

You do know he was a cold calculating bastard SS?

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During that first Test, an incident occurred, coloured by Miller's wartime service, that soured his relationship with Bradman and his feelings towards Test cricket. Michael Parkinson described it as follows:

Keith Miller was deeply affected by the Second World War. It changed him ... In the first post-war Ashes Test ... England were caught on a sticky ... [and] Bill Edrich came in. He'd had a serious war and he survived and Miller thought, 'He's my old Services mate. The last thing he wants after five years' war is to be flattened by a cricket ball, so I eased up. Bradman came up to me and said, 'Don't slow down, Keith. Bowl quicker.' That remark put me off Test cricket. Never felt the same way about it after that.'


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Australia had taken the series 3–0; Miller scored 384 runs at 76.80 and took 16 wickets at 20.88, which placed him second in both the batting and bowling averages, to Bradman and Lindwall respectively.[248] Nevertheless, Miller had become disillusioned with Bradman's ruthless mentality. Miller was impulsive and cared little for records or ruthlessly dominating his opponents, preferring to play in a flamboyant manner in close contests.[252][253]


BTW Bradman sat out the war due health.

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Bradman joined the Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) on 28 June 1940 and was passed fit for air crew duty.[111] The RAAF had more recruits than it could equip and train and Bradman spent four months in Adelaide before the Governor-General of Australia, Lord Gowrie, persuaded Bradman to transfer to the army, a move that was criticised as a safer option for him.[6] Given the rank of Lieutenant, he was posted to the Army School of Physical Training at Frankston, Victoria, to act as a divisional supervisor of physical training. The exertion of the job aggravated his chronic muscular problems, diagnosed as fibrositis. Surprisingly, in light of his batting prowess, a routine army test revealed that Bradman had poor eyesight.[112]

Invalided out of service in June 1941, Bradman spent months recuperating, unable even to shave himself or comb his hair due to the extent of the muscular pain he suffered. He resumed stockbroking during 1942.


Have a look at this mob (o' to watch them play)

http://en.wikipedia....es_cricket_team

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