Monday 29 April 2013

Master Blaster Sachin Tendulkar turns 40!

New Delhi: Record-breaking batsman Sachin Tendulkar turns 40 on Wednesday with no plans to retire despite media speculation and recent form suggesting that age is finally catching up with the "Little Master".

Sachin’s 40th Birthday- Full Coverage» 


Test and one-day cricket`s greatest run-scorer approaches the game with undiminished enthusiasm and insists he has much to offer despite slipping from the dizzying heights he reached earlier in his 24-year career.

"People have been talking about my retirement since 2005, but that does not worry me at all," Tendulkar chided reporters at a promotional event in New Delhi last week.

"Your job is to write, my job is to play. I will stick to my job and you stick to yours."

Tendulkar, afforded almost religious status in India, burst onto the world cricket scene as a 16-year-old in 1989 and has played a record 198 Tests and 463 one-dayers, scoring an unprecedented 100 international hundreds. 

He was singled out by Don Bradman but the Australian legend`s Test average is one of the few marks that Tendulkar has not been able to threaten, with his 15,837 runs coming at 53.86. Bradman averaged 99.94.

However, questions over his future mounted when he struggled for a year to score the ton he needed to take him to 100 centuries. He finally achieved the landmark against Bangladesh in Dhaka in March 2012.

Tendulkar, who decided not to play Twenty20 internationals after just one match in 2006, announced his retirement from one-day cricket last December in a bid to prolong his glittering Test career.

But his form in the five-day format has also dipped by his own stellar standards. He has scored just 1,145 runs in 21 Tests at an average of 31.80 since being part of India`s World Cup-winning team two years ago.

And Tendulkar has not added to his tally of 51 Test centuries since making 146 against South Africa in Cape Town in January 2011.

But despite his struggles with the bat, the veteran is refusing to follow fellow modern greats such as compatriot Rahul Dravid and Australia`s Ricky Ponting into retirement.

Sunil Gavaskar, the first man to reach the 10,000-run milestone in Tests, suggested last year that Tendulkar`s reflexes were on the slide. Former Australian captain Steve Waugh also feels he is past his best.

"He is not playing up to his standards," Waugh said last week. "But he himself has to decide (on retirement)."

When India succumbed to a Test series defeat against England at home in December, former skipper Sourav Ganguly backed calls for Tendulkar to quit.

"He is getting a long rope because of what he has achieved," Ganguly was quoted as saying by London`s Daily Telegraph newspaper. "As somebody watching it from outside, Tendulkar is not performing.

"And I think if I were Tendulkar, I would go (retire)."

But Kapil Dev, another ex-India skipper, says Tendulkar is fit and hungry for success even after so many years of gruelling cricket. "Sachin passes on both counts. He could go on for years if he wanted to," he told AFP.

Six months ago, Tendulkar admitted in a television interview that retirement had crossed his mind, but said he would take it series by series before making a final call.

"I am 39-plus and it is not abnormal for me to think of retirement," he said. "I will go by what my heart says. At this moment, my heart says I am OK."

There has been speculation in the media over whether Tendulkar will play in India`s next Test outing - a three-match away series against world number one side South Africa starting late in the year.

There is even talk of organising two home Tests against an unknown opponent before the tour of South Africa to enable Tendulkar to bow out with 200 appearances in a farewell series.

But few would be surprised if the player, described by former India coach Gary Kirsten as cricket`s "greatest role model", bats on at the top level.

As many as 102 cricketers have played Test matches after hitting 40, the oldest being Englishman Wilfred Rhodes, who was 52 when he took on the West Indies in Kingston, Jamaica, in 1930.

Tendulkar, who last year accepted a government offer to take up a nominated seat in India`s upper house of Parliament, the Rajya Sabha, has never revealed what he wants to post-retirement.

"It is going to be hard because I have not experienced anything close to what I might go through when I retire," Tendulkar said in a recent television interview.

"I cannot relate this moment with any other moment in my life."

Monday 11 March 2013

For cricket Sachin is Maradona and Pele put together: Donald





NEW DELHI: South African pace legend Allan Donald feels cricket would be a poorer sport once Sachin Tendulkar retires from the scene as the Indian veteran is "Maradona and Pele put together" for the game.

"Sachin Tendulkar's charm goes beyond the field. For cricket he is Maradona and Pele put together, it is as simple as that. Cricket will be a poorer sport when he quits the game. He has been unbelievably special," the 46-year-old South African has written in the upcoming book 'Sachin -- Cricketer of the Century', authored by Vimal Kumar and set to hit the stands later this month.

Donald said whenever he is asked about the greatest in the game, the first name that comes to his mind is Tendulkar.

"Tendulkar's is the first name that comes to mind the moment you ask who is the greatest," he said.

"In 1985, my granddad introduced Sachin to me through the Wisden Cricketer magazine. When he played for Yorkshire in county cricket, I saw him for the first time. He is the No. 1 player. I keep saying that and I don't think I will ever change my mind," he added.

Known for his hostile pace and 'White lightening', Donald has a word of advice for international bowlers on how to prepare for the senior batsman.

"You don't analyse Sachin two days before a Test. We always planned months in advance. We knew how highly Indian teams depended on him.

"History will show you that right-arm express pace bowlers have been successful against him. I spoke to Curtly Ambrose before my 1996 trip to India and he told me to never let Sachin leave the first 15 balls," he explained.

Tuesday 26 February 2013

Sachin Tendulkar 'clobbers' India to win over Australia in Chennai Test

 
 
Sachin Tendulkar, looking to make a calculated point to the Australians as well as his Team India mates, who were struggling to reach the 50-run victory target, just walked in, took guard at the crease and smashed the bowling apart.
Through a never-before-seen showmanship Sachin Tendulkar clobbered first two deliveries he faced for two sixes and tamed the Michael Clarke-led opposition immediately! Memory fails to recall when, if ever, he had ever shown so much aggression, even in his hey day.
Thereby, he indicated to his own team, that lost both openers early, Virender Sehwag and Murali Vijay, chasing a paltry total that there were really no demons in the pitch if you are focused on the job at hand and retain your professional attitude - it remains to be seen whether M S Dhoni stood up to applaud the Master Blaster, but some reports did indicate so.

Thursday 17 January 2013

Sachin Tendulkar walks out of net session: Video

Sachin Tendulkar walks out of net session: Video





A video of Indian batting legend Sachin Tendulkar expressing displeasure over the practice pitch in Mumbai ahead of Ranji Trophy semi-final clash against Services.
Tendulkar cut short his net session after facing only four deliveries as the practice pitch provided by the host association was not up to the mark.

Services had allocated two practice pitches for the Mumbai team and Tendulkar was the first one to pad up and enter the first of the two nets.

While he negotiated the first three deliveries from young left-arm spinner Vishal Dabholkar with ease, the fourth delivery suddenly kept low and hit in the toe-region of Tendulkar's boot.

Friday 11 January 2013

Career Stats of Sachin Ramesh Tendulkar


Sachin Tendulkar

Personal information
Full nameSachin Ramesh Tendulkar
Born24 April 1973 (age 39)
Bombay (now Mumbai), Maharashtra , India
NicknameTendlya, Little Master,[1] God of Cricket [2]
Height5 ft 5 in (1.65 m)
Batting styleRight-handed
Bowling styleRight-arm leg spinoff spinmedium pace
RoleBatsman
International information
National sideIndia
Test debut(cap 187)15 November 1989 v Pakistan
Last Test13 December 2012 v England
ODI debut(cap 74)18 December 1989 v Pakistan
Last ODI18 March 2012 v Pakistan
ODI shirt no.10
Only T20I (cap 11)1 December 2006 v South Africa
Domestic team information
YearsTeam
1988Cricket Club of India
1988–presentMumbai
1992Yorkshire
2008–presentMumbai Indians
Career statistics
CompetitionTestODIFCLA
Matches194463297551
Runs scored15,64518,42624,67821,999
Batting average54.3244.8358.4845.54
100s/50s51/6649/9679/11260/114
Top score248*200*248*200*
Balls bowled4,1748,0327,55110,230
Wickets4515470201
Bowling average54.6444.3262.1542.17
5 wickets ininnings0202
10 wickets in match0n/a0n/a
Best bowling3/105/323/105/32
Catches/stumpings114/–140/–184/–175/–
Source: Cricinfo, 14 December 2012