Even among cricketing legends, Don Bradman's stature is one that no other player has come close to. His stats are so much better than anyone before, during or after his time, that it truly boggles the mind. Various arguments are offered about the changes in the game today to try and explain 99.94: fielding standards have improved, making it tougher for batsmen to score; captains are more agreeable to posting defensive fields and restricting the runs; the game is played across several countries as opposed to just a few during Bradman's time, making it more difficult to adjust to different conditions. While these statements may be true as independent facts, they do nothing to diminish the sheer genius of the Don, and the staggering magnitude of his achievements.

The most famous number, of course, is his Test average, which is 64% better than the next-best (with a cut-off of 2000 runs). That alone shows how much better Bradman has been than anyone who has ever played the game. Comparing the overall batting numbers during his time with the corresponding number today further illustrates this point: in the 20 years in which Bradman played his Test cricket, the overall batting average was 31.85; in the 21 years since Sachin Tendulkar's Test debut, the overall batting average in 845 Tests is 31.07. Restricting this only to top-order batsmen (batsmen in the top six of a line-up) also throws up similar numbers - 39.99 during Bradman's time (1928 to 1948), and 38.40 during Tendulkar's (November 1989 onwards).

Apart from Bradman and Graeme Pollock, West Indian George Headley and Herbert Sutcliffe of England were the only ones who scored more than 2000 Test runs at averages of more than 60.

Highest averages in Test cricket (Qual: 2000 runs) Batsman Tests Runs Average 100s/ 50s Don Bradman 52 6996 99.94 29/ 13 Graeme Pollock 23 2256 60.97 7/ 11 George Headley 22 2190 60.83 10/ 5 Herbert Sutcliffe 54 4555 60.73 16/ 23 Ken Barrington 82 6806 58.67 20/ 35 Everton Weekes 48 4455 58.61 15/ 19 Wally Hammond 85 7249 58.45 22/ 24 Garry Sobers 93 8032 57.78 26/ 30

Among the batsmen who averaged 60, Pollock was the only one who came in after Bradman's time. Till the end of the 1940s, when Bradman finished his international career, Headley's 63.91 was the nearest anyone came to his 99.94 (though Headley's average fell away a bit later). Denis Compton, who was almost halfway through his Test career, averaged more than 60 at that point too, but his performances fell away thereafter and he finished averaging 50.06 from 78 matches.

Best Test averages before 1950 (Qual: 2000 runs) Batsman Tests Runs Average 100s/ 50s Don Bradman 52 6996 99.94 29/ 13 George Headley 21 2173 63.91 10/ 5 Herbert Sutcliffe 54 4555 60.73 16/ 23 Denis Compton 36 3132 60.23 13/ 12 Dudley Nourse 26 2469 58.78 8/ 12 Wally Hammond 85 7249 58.45 22/ 24 Jack Hobbs 61 5410 56.94 15/ 28 Len Hutton 41 3788 56.53 11/ 17

Bradman's stats are even more remarkable because of the eight years he lost due to the War. His ill health meant he might not have played too much cricket during this period anyway, but when international cricket resumed in 1946, he was able to summon his best immediately: in his first innings he scored 187 in Brisbane against England, and followed that up with 234 in the next Test, in Sydney. He followed that up with four centuries in six innings against India in 1947-48, and then, in the famous tour of the Invincibles in 1948, scored an unforgettable 173 not out as Australia became the first team to successfully chase a 400-plus target in the fourth innings. In the 15 Tests he played after the War, Bradman averaged more than 105, and scored eight hundreds.

Bradman, before and after the War Period Tests Runs Average 100s/ 50s Till 1938 37 5093 97.94 21/ 8 From 1946 15 1903 105.72 8/ 5 Career 52 6996 99.94 29/ 13

Talking about Bradman, Arthur Morris, the Australian opener who played with him, said: "He could never figure out how someone could get 60 or 70 and not get a hundred. He was able to concentrate so well, which kept him going and going and going." One look at the conversion rate corroborates exactly what Morris was talking about: Bradman scored 29 centuries in 52 Tests, and only 13 fifties. He also scored 12 double-centuries, which remains three more than the next best, and two triple-hundreds, which has been equalled by two batsmen.

Bradman's ratio of hundreds to fifties was a staggering 2.23. Among those who have scored at least 20 centuries, the second-best ratio is less than half that of Bradman's: India's Mohammad Azharuddin has 22 hundreds and 21 fifties, a ratio of slightly more than 1. Matthew Hayden is the only other batsman with more centuries than half-centuries.

Highest conversion rate of 50-plus scores into hundreds (Qual: 20 Test hundreds) Batsman Tests 100s 50s Ratio Don Bradman 52 29 13 2.23 Mohammad Azharuddin 99 22 21 1.05 Matthew Hayden 103 30 29 1.03 Virender Sehwag 79 21 22 0.95 Wally Hammond 85 22 24 0.92 Aravinda de Silva 93 20 22 0.91

Bradman scored a hundred every 1.79 Tests, which is again almost twice as good as the next best - Hayden's 3.43. The rate at which Bradman got double-hundreds was even more astounding - 12 in 80 innings, an average of one every 6.67 innings. In contrast, Brian Lara has nine in 232 innings (25.78 innings per double-century), Wally Hammond seven in 140 (20), Kumar Sangakkara seven in 152 (21.71), and Virender Sehwag six in 135 (22.50).

Best Tests-per-100 ratios (Qual: 20 Test hundreds) Batsman Tests 100s Ratio Don Bradman 52 29 1.79 Matthew Hayden 103 30 3.43 Sachin Tendulkar 169 48 3.52 Garry Sobers 93 26 3.58 Greg Chappell 87 24 3.63 Sunil Gavaskar 125 34 3.68

Bradman's propensity for big centuries also meant most of his career runs came in innings in which he made hundreds. Of the 6996 runs he scored, 5393 were in the 29 innings in which he scored centuries - a percentage of 77.09. In his other 51 innings he only scored 1603 runs at a modest average of 34.10. (Click here to check out where this average stands compared to other batsmen, with a cut-off of 1500 runs in non-hundreds.)

His percentage of 77.09 is also way higher than the other batting greats. Tendulkar's 48 hundreds have contributed 6964 out of 13,837 runs (50.33%), while the percentage for Ricky Ponting is 46.85, for Brian Lara 49.27, and 47.44 for Sunil Gavaskar. In those 29 innings in which he scored a hundred, Bradman scored almost 186 runs per innings, while his batting average (not-outs excluded) was more than 234. As the table below shows, his runs per innings is the highest among batsmen with at least 20 Test hundreds, though the difference between him and the next best isn't quite as much as in some other categories.

Highest runs per innings in hundreds (Qual: 20 centuries) Batsman 100s Runs in 100s Average Runs per inng Don Bradman 29 5393 234.47 185.97 Virender Sehwag 21 3706 185.30 176.48 Brian Lara 34 5889 184.03 173.21 Wally Hammond 22 3685 245.66 167.50 Kumar Sangakkara 23 3840 240.00 166.96 Mahela Jayawardene 28 4551 182.04 162.54

Bradman's 52 Tests were spread over only 11 series, since five-Test series were the norm then, and his averages in each of them show just how great a batsman he was. The lowest he averaged in any of them was 56.57, in the Bodyline series in 1932-33. On the other hand, he averaged more than 100 four times, and between 90 and 100 three times. (Click here for his series-wise averages.)

Series-wise spread of Bradman's averages 50 to 69.99 70 to 89.99 90 to 99.99 100 or more No. of series 2 2 3 4

Almost 20% of the Tests Bradman played were against India and South Africa, the two weak teams of his era. Bradman cashed in, averaging 190.12 in those 10 Tests, and scoring eight hundreds. However, in 42 other Tests he still averaged more than 88, and scored a hundred every two Tests.

In the 52 Tests he played, Bradman scored more than 25% of his team's runs (6996 out of 27,624 bat runs), more than 41% of the hundreds (29 out of 70) and averaged more than three times the combined average of the other batsmen. It can safely be said there won't be another like him again.