The cricket bat used by Australian sporting legend Don Bradman to launch his Test career has been put up for auction and is expected to fetch up to Aus$145,000.
Bradman, who retired with a yet-to-be-topped Test batting average of 99.94, used the bat to open his Test career in the 1928 series against England.
It was donated by him to the Sydney Sun newspaper in 1930 as a competition prize to raise money for a children’s hospital and was held by the boy who won until 2008 when he sold it for Aus$145,000 ($136,000).
The current vendor, an Australian collector, put it on display at the National Sports Museum at the Melbourne Cricket Ground but has now decided to sell.
“The market is tougher now but we expect to reach around the same price again,” Max Williamson of Mossgreen Auctions in Melbourne told AFP.
“Cricket has got a very big community of collectors so we expect it to be sold to a collector or an institution.”
The bat, signed by Bradman as DGB, also holds the signatures of 19 members of English and Australian teams who played in his maiden Test.