By Nick Bryant
BBC News, Sydney
An unusual lunch has been held in Sydney as part of the celebrations marking the Selectors ponder England changes ...
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Pope Benedict XVI arrives in Australia ...
Australia ends operations in Iraq ...
Key witness testifies in Olmert bribery case ...
Australia probes troop abuse claims ... centenary of the birth of Australian cricketer Donald Bradman.
Australia will officially mark the centenary on 27 August.
But some of his former team-mates have held a lunch three weeks early to mark another symbolic landmark - the day he would have been 99.94 years old.
There is an important reason why his fans got together early - 99.94 was Bradman's test batting average.
Had the great Don scored just four runs in his final international appearance at the Oval in 1948, he would have ended his career with an average of 100 - the only cricketer ever to come close to achieving that remarkable statistical feat.
So near
As it was, he made an uncharacteristic error, was deceived by a googly and suffered the crushing disappointment of being out for a duck - scoring no runs at all.
As a result, and as virtually every Australian cricket fan can tell you, Bradman ended instead with an average of 99.94, the great "so-near-but-so-far" of cricketing history.
Among the former players present at Sunday's lunch was Arthur Morris, the Australian batsman at the non-striker's end when Bradman was bowled out during that final test.
Though Morris went on to score 196, all that most people remember is Bradman's infamous nought.
Bradman died in his sleep at his home in Adelaide after a short illness in 2001, aged 92.
It was intended that there would be 99 guests at the lunch, each paying 99 Australian dollars ($92).
But in the end the celebration was over-subscribed and, suffice to say, duck did not feature on the menu.
(BBC)
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