Hayne not Bradman-esque, but Bevan was

By Matt_S / Roar Pro

Recently we read some sections of the Sydney media describe Jarryd Hayne’s feats as an equivalent to the late, great, cricket legend, Sir Donald Bradman. I was embarrassed by this comparison.

Though I think Hayne is an outstanding athlete, he is just into the first half of his career and is by no mean consistent in his performance, nor achieved enough to be described ‘Bradmanesque’.

While it is hard to compare achievements on the league field with those on the cricket pitch, there are athletes throughout history that deserve comparison.

What has Hayne done to deserve a comparison with Bradman? Can Hayne’s try scoring records come near the cricket greats near perfect batting average?

What would that be or how can we compare it?

I do not know the answer but I imagine it would be fairly high: say a strike rate of one try per game over your entire league career, plus all the other accolades Bradman achieved on and off the field?

While I do not compare Hayne with Bradman, nor do I even think he comes close in a cross sporting comparison, there is one league athlete who I think deserves the title to sit with Bradman, and indeed, other great sportsman in their respective sports throughout history.

This player is Brian Bevan, who played right wing for most of his career.

I come to this conclusion because Bevan fits most, if not all the criteria if Bradman is considered a legend in cricket and sport in general.

To argue this I will need to make a comparative, albeit, a cross-sport analysis of Bevan’s achievements. Bevan fits the criteria as follows:

* Played 720 games from between the period 1945 to 1964.
* Amassed 796 tries during this period for an average of 1.10 tries per game.
* Played 18 representative games for Other Nationalities, British Empire XIII, Rugby League XIII scoring 29 tries.
* Member of the Australian and British Rugby League Hall of Fame.
* Named on the wing in Australia’s team of the century.
* Featured on a British stamp in 1995.
* Statue erected in Warrington, the English club he most represented (620 appearances).
* Topped the try scoring charts in the English Rugby League five times.
* Scored 72 tries in one season.
* In his career in England, Bevan scored a hat-trick of tries or more in a single game 100 times. Twice he scored seven tries in a single game for Warrington, which is still a club record.
* During his sixteen year career with Warrington he helped the club win the Challenge Cup twice, three Rugby League Championships, a Lancashire Cup and six Lancashire League titles.

The above facts make for a truly great sportsman, regardless of code or sport.

Despite never representing Australia, Bevan’s representative matches for Other Nationalities (foreign players playing in the English Rugby League that mostly included Aussies, Kiwis, South Africans, Scots, and Welsh) pitched him against the Australian, English, New Zealand and French national teams in places like Bordeaux, Marseille, Paris and London before respectable crowds.

This was at a time when the British and the French national teams were at their zenith of power. The antipodeans were also more than a match.

Additionally, the English rugby league competition was a powerful entity during Bevan’s era with clubs like Warrington, Wigan, Huddersfield, and Leeds attracting club averages of 30,000 plus and championship and challenge cup semi finals and finals drawing upwards of 60-100,000 plus.

Off the field, Bevan was a great family man, modest, quite about his achievements, and an accomplished piano player. Another reason why Bevan could stand proud along a equally modest and brilliant Don Bradman.

Probably the only thing Bevan does not have is a number of books written about him, but the books there are of him make for impressive reading.

Jarryd Hayne will most probably never get any where near being a Bradman for his sport. But to be fair, that is probably something 99.9 per cent of athletes in team sport will fail to achieve. Brian Bevan damn sure comes close though.

The Crowd Says:

AUTHOR

2010-08-06T20:56:01+00:00

Matt_S

Roar Pro


Wow, extreme 13, anywhere I could find some info on that photo shoot because that would all but confirm my likening of Bevan to Bradman. I suppose it would be archived somewhere!

2010-08-06T12:54:27+00:00

Rellum

Roar Guru


Ok, getting slightly miffed at Sydney press calling him the "Hayne Plane". Hayne is obviously a Roma fan. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kco0O-eXciI

2010-08-06T08:39:32+00:00

extreme13

Roar Rookie


Why Mushi? Back in his day he was actually called the Bradman of Rugby League and the wizard of oz, matter of fact, he, Bradman and Baseballs Babe Ruth all got together for a photo shoot in America, 3 absolute champions with outrageous stats. So the people back then reporting about him felt he was something special.

2010-08-06T05:23:09+00:00

Mushi

Guest


To compare any winger to Bradman is a giant unfathomable leap in logic.

2010-08-05T23:26:25+00:00

Sam H

Guest


I think you're both wrong. Hayne is like Andy Flower was in the 1990s. One of the best, but surrounded by hacks.

2010-08-05T23:09:47+00:00

M1tch

Roar Guru


Colin Miller? lol Hayne is more a Andrew Symonds - can win a game for you in a burst, but sometimes can be a reserve grader

2010-08-05T23:00:58+00:00

Brett McKay

Guest


Matt, I'd put Hayne on par with Colin Miller, on the back of a handful of decent games over a few seasons... Bevan was something of a freak, I don't think too many top-flight players (in either League or Union, come to think of it) will even get close to Bevan's 1.1 tries a game strike rate...

AUTHOR

2010-08-05T22:59:05+00:00

Matt_S

Roar Pro


Thanks Ken. I'm not too worried about Bevan's international credentials cos he played for Other Nationalities which included some fantastic Aussies in the team and played competitively against all the major league nations, so he did come up against the likes of Churchill, Gasnier, Puig Aubert. But I might just look at those records and see exactly who he played against. But scoring 29 tries in 18 rep games is still impressive.

2010-08-05T22:45:17+00:00

Ken

Guest


He's a bit of an enigma to classify from an Australian perspective because he never really played here against the champions we know from the era and wasn't in the national team. Obviously his feats in longevity and try-scoring potency are peerless and speak volumes and yet there's always the question mark of how good would he have gone if he was running around for Easts against the Dragons 11 premierships in a row. Not a question of whether he was a champion, he obviously was and as you point out the English comp at the time was considered strong, but just how he compared to our known benchmark magicians of that era like Churchill and Gasnier.

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