DON BRADMAN
LORD TENNYSON'S CRITICISM LONDON, November 4. Lord Tennyson, speaking at the Ferrets Cricket Club dinner, said that Bradman was perfectly right in refusing the Accrington offer. Though Bradman was one of the finest batsmen in the world ho had a great deal to learn, and he was not in the same class as Tnimper, Hill, and others. He had not half the strokes of Hobbs, Woolley, or Sutcliffe. The sooner Bradman did not want to get his name in print tho better. Mr Arthur Gilligan said he agreed with Lord Tennyson.
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Evening Star, Issue 20942, 5 November 1931, Page 4
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93DON BRADMAN Evening Star, Issue 20942, 5 November 1931, Page 4
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