Stuff that I learned today on DGB:
1) His first capitancy was in 36. DGB was apparently a Freemason (well, will give ammo for one stalwart of the forum

). Bill O Reilly and three other Catholics of Irish background were instigated by capitan DGB for a disciplinary reason that even when B O'R was around 80 or so, he never forgave DGB for that bs maneuver.
2) DGB apparently got gifted a 1000 GBP gift after the epic 30 series. Which was like a king's ransom those days. DGB refused to share it with his team-mates. This was at the height of the Great Depression. Oz (as expected) trailed the US by 1 year even with the Depression. There was depression in england too, not as much as the US. Quite a few of the regulars who went awol from the english team were out hunting for jobs. So there you go, the 974 happened for a reason

.
3) His two epitome series were 1930 (974 runs + RE Foster's famous debut 287* got upended by his 309 in one day + 334 at the end) and 1948 (the Invincible tour) where DGB capitaned one last time. As I mentioned before, the average of the english team in the 30 tour was > 35 years. Coming to the 48 tour, apparently DGB was reluctant to tour citing old-age, but then this was post-WWII fanaticism/rebuilding the nation time. So he felt the need to lead to do what was necessary to up the people's spirits. Since this was WWII civilian rationing time in England, the assies set off with 200 bags of food they would consume in England, which was very well received. DGB was like a grandfather figure in the team, very bossy but supportive. Keith Miller (or was it Arthur Mailey) had some nice stuff to say about DGB and his bossiness, but this is a family phorum. Post-WWII English team was a non-starter, half the team got killed or maimed in the War, DGB got a honorable discharge from the assie side (or something to that effect), no wonder the Invincibles were Invincibles.
4) DGB's average before Bodyline was ~112. After that series, it never went past ~99 even though Larwood retired in the post-Bodyline era to maintain amity between oz and england. Larwood eventually settled in Kingsford, 5km from SCG. Larwood wrote a ghosted autobiography where he claims that DGB murdered cricket by his industrial-level plundering and it is not right to claim that I murdered cricket by my bowling. In the 34 tour, Larwood had gotten a shellacing from DGB and ever since that point, his primal obsession was DGB. Jardine as I mentioned before was more of a "these assies are assies" type, ending up in Hinduism or Orientalism.
5) When asked in an interview in the 70s about his last innings second ball duck to Eric Hollies, whether he can laugh it off now, a serious DGB unable to understand the non-seriousness of the question apparently hit off with "No, I still regret it." And oh yea, the whole english team sang "He is a jolly good fellow" before DGB left the pavilion.
6) DGB was apparently an anti-social in the team, who lived the duty of being born to be a star. He never talked to his team beyond the field, never drank beer, went back to respond to his fan mail for like 2-3 hours per day. He was apparently lured to play in the english county forgoing his assie national duties and he was inches close to accepting that offer (1000 GBP offer) till the assie companies of that era ganged up and came with a counter-offer of the same amount. He actually said this (or something similar): "I am like the opera or the symphony conductor, people pay to come see me. I am the star of the show. Now if I get an offer to star elsewhere, I being the performer, should not think twice to go." Some of the worst and most visceral criticizers of DGB were his team-mates, much of that still survives and is worth digging.
7) DGB was a selector even in 36 as capitans that day were selectors too, and continued to be in that role (or a similar one) through 1971. And was a major say in the apartheid era policies of ACB as he was the Chairman + responsible for some key boycott decisions of the SA team.
8 ) Apparently there was a famous obituary written on DGB when in england, he got hit with a burst appendix.
9) Till DGB came to the scene, keeping scores was seen as a big insult. In fact, the 1928-29 ashes capitan on the assie side said "It is not what you score, but how you score it." DGB brought in that obsession to live cricket, see cricket and think cricket, but in the process never got quite close to being Mr. cricket. Or so claim people who know better than me.