While
Bradman was leading Australia, Hitler’s aggression, which began with the
occupation of the German Rhineland in 1936, and continued with the annexation
of Austria in March 1938, was reaching its zenith. With a tentative Britain and France mute spectators in their
eagerness to avoid a conflagaration like the First World War, Hitler marched
on. In March 1939 his armies seized Czechoslovakia ,
and on September 1 attacked Poland .
Britain and France
could not hold back any longer, and on September 3 announced a state of war.
Thus began the greatest conflict in history, which came to be known as the
Second World War of 1939-45.
The
War was to take away eight years of Bradman’s Test career, as of many other top
cricketers then, and a quarter century earlier. First-class cricket, though,
continued for a while in Australia .
In 1939-40, for the only time in his career, Bradman scored over a thousand
runs in a Sheffield season, hitting up 1062
runs at an average of 132.75. In 9 first-class matches that season he
aggregated 1475 runs at 122.91 per innings with 5 hundreds, and a highest of
267.
Bradman
enlisted in the Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) in June 1940, was transferred
to the army as a physical training instructor at Frankston, Victoria, but was
released on health grounds. Sheffield Shield was now suspended, and Bradman
appeared in two first-class matches in 1940-41, scoring 0, 6, 0 and 12. For the
next four seasons Bradman played no first-class cricket. By now he had
aggregated 22,863 runs at an average of 95.66 with 92 hundreds.
In March 1944, the code phase that informed the Allied troops of the
assault on the monastery at Monte Cassino in Italy was: “Bradman will be
batting tomorrow.”
Now, with the long drawn war, health issues, creeping middle-age and
a growing family, whether The Don would be able to stand up to the demands of
top-grade cricket and the lofty standards that he had set himself, was a riddle
that few could answer. Perhaps Bradman himself was not sure. In any event, no
one knew what the new world, after the devastations of a long war, would bring
in its wake. The First World War ended a glorious chapter in English cricket
and gave rise to Warwick Armstrong’s great Australian side. Would the Second
World War have the opposite effect, and bring to a close Australia ’s years of supremacy?
There were more questions than answers.
(Author
Indra Vikram Singh can be contacted on email singh_iv@hotmail.com
Follow
Indra Vikram Singh on Twitter @IVRajpipla).
Don’s
Century
Published by Sporting Links
ISBN 978-81-901668-5-0, Fully Illustrated
French Fold 21.5 cm x 28 cm, 188 Pages
Price Rupees 995
Indra Vikram Singh’s latest books published
by Sporting Links:
A Maharaja’s Turf ISBN
978-81-901668-3-6
The Big Book of World Cup
Cricket ISBN 978-81-901668-4-3
Don’s Century ISBN
978-81-901668-5-0
Crowning Glory ISBN
978-81-901668-6-7
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