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    Is Sachin Tendulkar the greatest schoolboy cricketerever?Twenty years ago, a fresh-faced youngster was being hailed as the next big thing. Would he play for India,the cognoscenti asked themselves

    Harsha BhogleNovember 12, 2009

    Comments: 29| Text size:A| A

    Author's note:This piece was written 21 years ago forSportsworld magazine (and was only retrieved

    thanks to Mudar Patherya, who was a young cricket writer then). Sachin Tendulkar was 15, a year and a

    half away from playing Test cricket and four months short of his first-class debut. I was not yet 27, in an

    advertising job out of business school, with one Test match and a handful of one-dayers on Doordarshan

    behind me. We were both looking ahead in our own spheres. What a time it was, it was, a time of

    innocence...

    All of Bombay's maidansare a stage. Where every

    cricketer has a role to play. And his seems to be

    the blockbuster. Ever since he unveiled Act One

    early last year, audiences have been waiting, a

    little too eagerly at times, to watch the next

    scene. Sachin Tendulkar is only, so far, acting in a

    high-school production. Yet critics have gone to

    town. And rave reviews have not stopped coming

    in.

    I guess it can only happen in Bombay. That a

    schoolboy cricketer sometimes becomes the talk of

    the town. Why, at the end of every day's play in

    the final of Bombay's Harris Shield (for Under 17s)

    everybody wanted to know how many he had

    made. For he does bat three days sometimes! And

    for all the publicity he has received, Sachin

    Tendulkar is really still a kid. He only completed

    15 on 24 April. And is very shy. Opening out only

    after you have coaxed him for some time. As his

    coach Mr Achrekar says, "Aata thoda bolaila laglai"

    [He's started talking a bit now]. And it's then that

    you realise that his voice has not yet cracked.

    His record is awesome. He has scored far more

    runs than all of us scored looking dreamily out of

    the window in a boring Social Studies class when

    we were his age.

    For a prodigy, he started late. When he was nine years old. And it was only in 1984-85 that he scored his

    first school-level fifty. But 1985-86 was a little better. He scored his first Harris Shield hundred and played

    for Bombay in the Vijay Merchant (Under-15) tournament. And 1986-87 was when he blossomed. Still

    "Once I get set, I don't think of anything" Unknown

    Related LinksPlayers/Officials:Vinod Kambli|Sachin TendulkarTeams:India

    http://www.cricinfo.com/magazine/content/story/434247.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/magazine/content/story/434247.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/magazine/content/story/434247.html#commentshttp://www.cricinfo.com/magazine/content/story/434247.html#commentshttp://www.cricinfo.com/ci/content/player/30009.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/ci/content/player/30009.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/ci/content/player/30009.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/ci/content/player/35320.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/ci/content/player/35320.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/ci/content/player/35320.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/india/content/team/6.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/india/content/team/6.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/india/content/team/6.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/india/content/team/6.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/ci/content/player/35320.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/ci/content/player/30009.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/magazine/content/story/434247.html#commentshttp://www.cricinfo.com/magazine/content/story/434247.html
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    only 13, he led his school, Shardashram Vidyamandir, to victory in the Giles Shield (for Under-15s). He

    scored three centuries - 158*, 156 and 197 - and then in the Harris Shield scored 276, 123 and 150. In

    all, he scored nine hundreds, including two double hundreds, a total of 2336 runs.

    By now everyone had begun to sit up and take notice. The beginning of the 1987-88 season saw Sachin

    at the Ranji nets. Once again the top players were away playing Tests and perhaps the Bombay selectors

    felt it wouldn't be a bad idea to give Sachin first-hand experience of a higher category of cricket. He was

    named in the 14 for the first couple of games, and manager Sandeep Patil kept sending him out

    whenever possible - for a glass of water or a change of gloves. All along Sachin probably knew that he

    was still at best a curiosity, and that while Bombay was giving him every blooding opportunity, he had to

    prove himself on the maidans.

    And that is exactly what he did. Season 1987-88 was a purple patch that never ended. Playing in the

    Vijay Merchant tournament he scored 130 and 107 and then at the Inter-Zonal stage he made 117

    against the champions, East Zone. Then in the Vijay Hazare tournament (for Under-17s) he scored 175

    for West Zone against champions East Zone.

    Then came the avalanche. A 178* in the Giles Shield and a sequence in the Harris Shield of 21*, 125,207*, 329* and 346*! A small matter of 1028 runs in five innings! And in the course of that innings of

    329* he set themuch talked-about recordof 664 for the third wicket with Vinod Kambli, who, it is not

    always realised, scored 348*. Perhaps the most fascinating of them all was the innings of 346*. Coming

    immediately, as it did, in the shadow of the world record, a lot of people were curious to see him bat.

    Sachin ended the first day on 122, batted through the second to finish with 286, and when the innings

    closed around lunch on the third day, he was 346*. And then came back to bowl the first ball. In April's

    Bombay summer.

    But when did this story begin? Like all children,

    Tendulkar took to playing "galli"cricket. His brother

    Ajit was a good player and persuaded Mr Achrekar,probably Bombay's most famous coach, to look at

    him. Achrekar recalls, "When he first came to my

    net four-five years ago, he looked just like any

    other boy and I didn't take him seriously. Then one

    day I saw him bat in an adjacent net. He was trying

    to hit every ball but I noted that he was middling all

    of them. Some time later he got a fifty and a friend

    of mine, who was umpiring that game, came and told me that this boy would play for India. I laughed at

    him and said that there were so many boys like him in my net. But he insisted. 'Mark my words, he will

    play for India.' My friend is dead now but I'm waiting to see if his prophecy comes true.'

    Tendulkar is taking first steps towards getting there. He discovered that his house, being in Bandra,

    would not allow him to be at Shivaji Park whenever he wanted. He now spends most of his time at his

    uncle's house, just off this nursery of Bombay cricket. When he is not actually playing, that is.

    Quite often, he is playing all day; important because it has helped him build the stamina to play long

    innings. "I don't get tired," he says, referring to them. "If you practise every day, you get used to it."

    "People don't realise that he is just 15. They

    keep calling him for some felicitation or theother. The other day he was asked toinaugurate a children's library. This is

    ridiculous. These things are bound to go tohis head. He will start thinking he has

    achieved everything."Tendulkar's coach, RamakantAchrekar

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    And what about that world-record innings? "I could bat very freely then because my partner Vinod Kambli

    was batting so well that I knew that even if I failed, he would get enough runs for the side."

    Isn't there a lot of pressure on him now? Everyone assumes he will get a big score? "Only in the

    beginning. Till I get set. Once I get set, I don't think of anything."

    Wasn't he thrilled at being invited to the Ranji nets? "Definitely. After playing there I got a lot of

    confidence."

    Everything in Tendulkar's life has so far revolved around cricket. Including his choice of school. A few

    years back he shifted to Shardashram Vidyamandir, only so that he could come under the eye of

    Achrekar. "It helped me tremendously because 'sir's' guidance is so good," he says.

    Strangely his parents were never very keen about cricket. His brother Ajit says, "They were not very

    interested in the game, though they gave him all the encouragement. You see, in our colony all parents

    were training their children to be engineers and doctors. And they would say, "Gallit kheluncricketer hoto

    kai?" [You don't become a cricketer by playing in the alleys]. I am so happy he is doing well because now

    people think he is doing something."

    The question that arises then, given all the publicity is: Just how good is Sachin Tendulkar?

    "For his age, unbelievable," says Sharad Kotnis, Bombay's veteran cricket watcher. "He is definitely

    comparable to Ashok Mankad, who had a similar run many years ago. But remember Ashok had cricket

    running in his family and his father often came to see him play. I think Tendulkar's strongest point is that

    he is willing to work very hard."

    Luckily for Sachin, there is a calming influence over him, just so he doesn't get carried away by this

    acclaim. His coach Achrekar knows exactly what he is talking about. "He is not perfect yet. Far from it. In

    fact, I would say he is not even halfway there. He still has a lot of faults, particularly while driving

    through the on, which is an indicator of a class batsman. He still has a long way to go, but what I likeabout him is his ability to work hard. I don't think we should get carried away by his scores. After all, one

    has to take into account the nature of the wicket and the quality of the bowlers. By his standards the

    quality of the bowling he faced was not good enough.

    "His real test will come this year when he plays in the 'A' Division of the Kanga League. [Sachin will play

    for the Cricket Club of India, which for him has waived the stipulation that children under 18 are not

    allowed inside the Club House!] He should get 70s and 80s there and not just 20s and 30s; particularly

    towards the end of the season, when the wickets get better."

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    Achrekar, in fact, is quite upset about the publicity

    Sachin is getting. "People don't realise that he is

    just 15. They keep calling him for some felicitation

    or the other. The other day he was asked to

    inaugurate a children's library. This is ridiculous.

    These things are bound to go to his head. He willstart thinking he has achieved everything. I hope

    all this stops so he can concentrate and work

    hard."

    Yet both Achrekar and Kotnis agree on when they

    think Sachin will become a Ranji regular. "I think

    he should be playing the Ranji Trophy next year. I

    think it is unfair to compare him to the [Lalchand]

    Rajputs and [Alan] Sippys yet, but I think he

    should play next year," feels Kotnis. And Achrekar

    adds, "Inspite of what I said about him, if hemaintains this kind of progress, he should play the

    Ranji next year."

    Clearly the curtain call is still a long way off for

    Sachin Tendulkar. He has a lot of things going for

    him. Most importantly he is in Bombay, where the

    sheer atmosphere can propel him ahead. In how

    many cities would a 15-year-old be presented a Gunn and Moore by the Indian captain? And in which

    other city would the world's highest run-getter write to a 15-year-old asking him not to get disheartened

    at not getting the Best Junior Cricketer award?

    Sunil Gavaskar wrote to Tendulkar to tell him that several years earlier another youngster too had not got

    the award and that he didn't do too badly in Test cricket. For him the letter from his hero is a prized

    possession. Another great moment was a meeting with him where " he told me that I should forget the

    past every time I go to bat. I should always remember that I have to score runs each time."

    He is in the right company. And the right environment. The next few years will show whether he has it in

    him the mental toughness to overcome the over-exposure. If it does not go to his head, surely there is a

    great future beckoning. This is really just the beginning and I will be watching this little star with avid

    interest for the next three years.

    If he is still charting blockbusters, I'd love to do another review then.

    Harsha Bhogle is a commentator, television presenter and writer. This article was first published in Sportsworldmagazine in1988

    Feeds: Harsha Bhogle

    Tendulkar as a wee thing with coach Ramakant Achrekar

    Unknown

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    Man-child superstarTendulkar the cricketer seemingly emerged fully formed when he first picked up a bat. So too perhaps didTendulkar the luminary

    Rahul BhattacharyaNovember 15, 2009

    Comments: 22| Text size:A| ASachin Tendulkar comes to the ground in

    headphones. He might make a racket in the

    privacy of the bus, who knows, but when he steps

    out he is behind headphones. Waiting to bat he is

    behind his helmet. The arena is swinging already

    to the chant, "Sachin, Sachin", the first long and

    pleading, the second urgent and demanding, but

    Tendulkar is oblivious, behind his helmet.

    At the fall of the second wicket, that familiar

    traitorous roar goes round the stadium, at whichpoint Tendulkar walks his slow walk out, golden in

    the sun, bat tucked under the elbow. The gloves

    he will only begin to wear when he approaches

    the infield, to busy himself against distraction from

    the opposition. Before Tendulkar has even taken

    guard, you know that his quest is equilibrium.

    As he bats his effort is compared in real time with

    earlier ones. Tendulkar provides his own context.

    The conditions, the bowling attack, his tempo, his

    very vibe, is assessed against an innings playedbefore.Today he reminds me of the time when

    Why isn't he . What's wrong with him!

    If the strokes are flowing, spectators feel something beyond pleasure. They feel something like gratitude.

    The silence that greets his dismissal is about the loudest sound in sport. With Tendulkar the discussion is

    not how he got out, but why. Susceptible to left-arm spin? To the inswinger? To the big occasion? The

    issue is not about whether it was good or not, but where does it rank? A Tendulkar innings is never over

    when it is over. It is simply a basis for negotiation. He might be behind headphones or helmet, but

    outside people are talking, shouting, fighting, conceding, bargaining, waiting. He is a national habit.

    But Tendulkar goes on. This is his achievement, to live the life of Tendulkar. To occupy the space where

    fame and accomplishment intersect, akin to the concentrated spot under a magnifying glass trained in

    the sun, and remain unburnt.

    "Sachin is God" is the popular analogy. Yet god may smile as disease, fire, flood and Sreesanth visit the

    earth, and expect no fall in stock. For Tendulkar the margin for error is rather less. The late Naren

    Tamhane was merely setting out the expectation for a career when he remarked as selector, "Gentlemen,

    Tendulkar never fails." The question was whether to pick the boy to face Imran, Wasim, Waqar and Qadir

    in Pakistan. Tendulkar was then 16.

    In a zone of his making: Tendulkar's quest on the field is

    equilibrium Getty Images

    Related Links

    Teams:India

    http://www.cricinfo.com/sachinat20/content/current/story/434507.html#commentshttp://www.cricinfo.com/sachinat20/content/current/story/434507.html#commentshttp://www.cricinfo.com/india/content/team/6.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/india/content/team/6.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/india/content/team/6.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/india/content/team/6.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/sachinat20/content/current/story/434507.html#comments
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    Sixteen and so ready that precocity is too mild a word. He made refinements, of course, but the marvel

    of Tendulkar is that he was a finished thing almost as soon as began playing.

    The maidansof Bombay are dotted with tots six or seven years old turning out for their coaching classes.

    But till the age of 11, Tendulkar had not played with a cricket ball. It had been tennis- or rubber-ball

    games at Sahitya Sahwas, the writers' co-operative housing society where he grew up, the youngest of

    four cricket-mad siblings by a distance. The circumstances were helpful. In his colony friends he had

    playmates, and from his siblings, Ajit in particular, one above Sachin but older by 11 years, he had

    mentorship.

    It was Ajit who took him to Ramakant Achrekar, and the venerable coach inquired if the boy was

    accustomed to playing with a "season ball" as it is known in India. The answer did not matter. Once he

    had a look at him, Achrekar slotted him at No. 4, a position he would occupy almost unbroken through

    his first-class career. In his first two matches under Achrekar Sir, he made zero and zero.

    Memory obscures telling details in the dizzying rise thereafter. Everybody remembers the 326 not out in

    the664-run gig with Kambli. Few remember the 346 not out in the following game, the trophy final.

    Everyone knows the centuries on debut in the Ranji Trophy and Irani Trophy at 15 and 16. Few knowthat he got them in the face of a collapse in the first instance and virtually out of partners in the second.

    Everyone knows his nose was bloodied by Waqar Younis in that first Test series, upon which he waved

    away assistance. Few remember that he struck the next ball for four.

    This was Tendulkar five years after he'd first handled a cricket ball.

    Genius, they say, is infinite patience. But it is first of all an intuitive grasp of something beyond the scope

    of will - or, for that matter, skill. In sportspersons it is a freakishness of the motor senses, even a kind of

    ESP.

    Tendulkar's genius can be glimpsed without him

    actually holding a bat. Not Garry Sobers' equal with

    the ball, he is nevertheless possessed of a similar

    versatility. He swings it both ways, a talent that

    eludes several specialists. He not only rips big

    legbreaks but also lands his googlies right, a task

    beyond some wrist spinners. Naturally he also

    bowls offspin, usually to left-handers and

    sometimes during a spell of wrist spin. In the field he mans the slips as capably as he does deep third

    man, and does both in a single one-dayer. Playing table tennis he is ambidextrous. By all accounts he is a

    brilliant, if hair-raising, driver. He is a champion Snake player on the cellphone, according to Harbhajan

    Singh, whom he also taught a spin variation.

    His batting is of a sophistication that defies generalisation. He can be destroyer or preserver. Observers

    have tried to graph these phases into a career progression. But it is ultimately a futile quest for

    Tendulkar's calibrations are too minute and too many to obey compartmentalisation. Given conditions,

    given his fitness, his state of mind, he might put away a certain shot altogether, and one thinks it is a

    part of his game that has died, till he pulls it out again when the time is right, sometimes years

    afterwards. Let alone a career, in the space of a single session he can, according to the state of the

    rough or the wind or the rhythm of a particular bowler, go from predatorial to dead bat or vice versa.

    The wonder is that in the years between hehas done nothing to sully his innocence,

    nothing to deaden the impish joy, nothing todisrupt the infinite patience or damage theimmaculate equilibrium through the riot of

    his life and career

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    Nothing frustrates Indians as much as quiet periods from Tendulkar, and indeed often they are self-

    defeating. But outsiders have no access to his thoughts. However eccentric, they are based on a

    heightened cricket logic rather than mood. Moods are irrelevant to Tendulkar. Brian Lara or Mohammad

    Azharuddin might be stirred into artistic rage. Tendulkar is a servant of the game. He does not play out of

    indignation nor for indulgence. His aim is not domination but runs. It is the nature of his genius.

    The genius still doesn't explain the cricket world's enchantment with Tendulkar. Ricky Ponting and

    Jacques Kallis are arguably not lesser cricketers than he, but have nothing like his following or presence.

    Among contemporaries only Shane Warne could draw an entire stadium's energy towards himself, but

    then Warne worked elaborately towards this end. Tendulkar on the pitch is as uncalculated as Warne was

    deliberate. Warne worked the moments before each delivery like an emcee at a title fight. Tendulkar

    goes through a series of ungainly nods and crotch adjustments. Batting, his movements are neither

    flamboyant nor languid; they are contained, efficient. Utility is his concern. Having hit the crispest shot

    between the fielders he can still be found scurrying down the wicket, just in case.

    Likewise, outside the pitch nothing he does calls up attention. In this he is not unusual for the times. It

    has been, proved by exceptions of course, the era of the undemonstrative champion. Ali, Connors,

    McEnroe, Maradona have given way to Sampras, Woods, Zidane, Federer, who must contend with the

    madness of modern media and sanitisation of corporate obligation.

    Maybe Tendulkar the superstar, like Tendulkar the cricketer, was formed at inception. Then, as now, he

    is darling. He wears the big McEnroe-inspired curls of his youth in a short crop, but still possesses the

    cherub's smile and twinkle. Perhaps uniquely, he is granted not the sportstar's indulgence of perma-

    adolescence but that of perma-childhood. A man-child on the field: maybe it is the dichotomy that is

    winning. The wonder is that in the years between he has done nothing to sully his innocence, nothing to

    deaden the impish joy, nothing to disrupt the infinite patience or damage the immaculate equilibrium

    through the riot of his life and career.

    Rahul Bhattacharya is the author ofPundits from Pakistan: On Tour with India, 2003-04Feeds: Rahul Bhattacharya

    'Tendulkar controls the game'What are the things that set the great man apart from mere mortals? The ability to read the game acutely,pick the ball early, dedication, discipline and more

    As told to Nagraj GollapudiNovember 15, 2009

    Comments: 58| Text size:A| A

    The first time Virender Sehwag met Sachin Tendulkar was in March 2001, at a practice session ahead of

    thefirst ODIof the home series against Australia. For Sehwag, Tendulkar was the man who had inspired

    him to skip exams in school and allowed him to dream of cricket as a career. Sehwag was shy then, and

    didn't speak to his hero. He got 58 off 51 balls and picked up three wickets. Tendulkar later walked up to

    him and said, "You've got talent. Continue playing the same way and I'm sure you will make your name."

    That ability to motivate youngsters is one of the traits, Sehwag says, that makes Tendulkar special. Here

    he tells Cricinfo about 10 things that make Tendulkar stand out.

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    Discipline

    He never comes late to any practice session, never

    comes late to the team bus, never comes late to

    any meeting - he is always five minutes ahead of

    time. If you are disciplined, it shows you are

    organised. And then he is ready for anything onthe cricket field.

    Mental strength

    I've learned a lot of things from him as far as

    mental strength goes - on how to tacke a

    situation, how to tackle a ball or bowler. If you are

    not tough mentally, you can't score the number of

    runs and centuries he has in the last two decades.

    He is a very good self-motivator.

    He always said to me: whatever the situation or

    whichever the bowler you face, always believe in

    yourself. There was this occasion in South Africa,

    early in my career, when I was not scoring runs

    fluently, so he suggested I try a few mental

    techniques that had worked for him. One of the

    things he said was: Always tell yourself you are

    better than others. You have some talent and that

    is why you are playing for India, so believe in

    yourself.

    Picking the ball early

    He can pick the ball earlier than other batsmen

    and that is a mark of a great batsman. He is

    virtually ready for the ball before it is bowled. Only great players can have two shots for one ball, like

    Tendulkar does, and a big reason is that he picks the ball very early.

    Soft hands

    I've never seen him play strokes with hard hands. He always tries to play with soft hands, always tries to

    meet the ball with the centre of the bat. That is timing. I have never been able to play consistently with

    soft hands.

    Planning

    One reason he can convert his fifties into hundreds is planning: which bowler he should go after, whichbowler he should respect, in which situation he should play aggressively, in which situation he should

    defend. It is because he has spent hours thinking about all of it, planning what to do. He knows what a

    bowler will do in different situations and he is ready for it.

    In mydebut Testhe scored 155 and he knew exactly what to do every ball. We had already lost four

    wickets (68 for 4) when I walked in, and he warned me about the short ball. He told me that the South

    African fast bowlers would bowl short-of-length balls regularly, but he knew how to counter that. If they

    Master and pupil: Sehwag credits Tendulkar with teaching him

    how to compile big hundreds AFP

    Related LinksSpecials :'Awesome feeling to get that Chennai hundred'Players/Officials:Virender Sehwag|Sachin TendulkarTeams:India

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    bowled short of a length, he cut them over slips; when they bowled outside off stump, he cut them; and

    when they tried to bowl short into his body, he pulled with ease. Luckily his advice had its effect on me,

    and I made my maiden hundred!

    Adaptability

    This is one area where he is really fast. And that is because he is such a good reader of the game. After

    playing just one or two overs he can tell you how the pitch will behave, what kind of bounce it has, which

    length is a good one for the batsman, what shots to play and what not to.

    A good example was in theCenturion ODIof the 2006-07 series. India were batting first. Shaun Pollock

    bowled the first over and fired in a few short-of-length balls, against which I tried to play the back-foot

    punch. Tendulkar cautioned me immediately and said that shot was not a good option. A couple of overs

    later I went for it again and was caught behind, against Pollock.

    Making bowlers bowl to his strengths

    He will leave a lot of balls and give the bowler a false sense of security, but the moment it is pitched up

    to the stumps or closer to them, Tendulkar will easily score runs.

    If the bowler is bowling outside off stump Tendulkar can disturb his line by going across outside off

    stump and playing to midwicket. He puts doubts in the bowler's mind, so that he begins to wonder if he

    has bowled the wrong line and tries to bowl a little outside off stump - which Tendulkar can comfortably

    play through covers.

    In Sydneyin 2004, in the first innings he didn't play

    a single cover drive, and remained undefeated on

    241. He decided to play the straight drive and

    flicks, so he made the bowlers pitch to his

    strengths. It is not easy. In the Test before that,in

    Melbourne, he had got out trying to flick. After that when we had a chat he said he was getting outplaying the cover drive and the next game he would avoid the cover drive. I thought he was joking

    because nobody cannot not play the cover drive - doesn't matter if you are connecting or not. I realised

    he was serious in Sydney when he was on about 180-odd and he had missed plenty of opportunities to

    play a cover drive. I was stunned.

    Ability to bat in different gears

    This is one aspect of batting I have always discussed with Tendulkar: how he controls his game; the way

    he can change gears after scoring a half-century. Suddenly he scores 10-12 runs an over, or maybe a

    quick 30 runs in five overs, and then again slows down and paces his innings.

    He has maintained that it all depends on the team's position. If you are in a good position you tend to

    play faster. He also pointed out that the batsman must always think about what can happen if he gets

    out and the consequences for the team. The best example is theknock of 175. I was confident he would

    pull it off for India and he almost did.

    Building on an innings

    I learned from Tendulkar how to get big hundreds. He told me early on that once you get a hundred you

    are satisfied for yourself. But it is also the best time to convert that into a bigger score for the team

    because then the team will be in a good position.

    Only great players can have two shots forone ball, like Tendulkar does, and a big

    reason is that he picks the ball very early

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    If you look at my centuries they have always been big. A good instance of this wasin Multanin 2004,

    when he told me I had given away a good position in Melbourne (195) the previous year and the team

    lost, and I needed to keep that in mind against Pakistan. In Multan, in the first hundred of the triple

    century I had hit a few sixes. He walked up to me after I reached the century and said he would slap me

    if I hit any further sixes. I said why. He said that if I tried hitting a six and got out the team would lose

    the control over the game, and I needed to bat through the day. So I didn't hit a single six till I reached295. By then India were 500-plus and I told him I was going to hit a six!

    Dedication

    This is the most important aspect of his success. In his life cricket comes first. When he is on tour he is

    thinking about nothing but cricket, and when he is not on tour he dedicates quality time to his family.

    That shows his dedication to the game and to his family. He has found the right balance.

    Nagraj Gollapudi is an assistant editor at Cricinfo

    Feeds: Nagraj Gollapudi

    The Sachin I knowTendulkar has found the urge, and the solutions, to be able to play for 20 years. That is a landmark to becelebratedHarsha BhogleNovember 13, 2009

    Comments: 112| Text size:A| A

    Sachin Tendulkar may have inspired others to

    write poetry but he batted in robust prose. Not for

    him the tenderness and fragility of the poet, the

    excitement of a leaf fluttering in a gentle breeze.

    No. Tendulkar is about a plantation standing up to

    the typhoon, the skyscraper that stands tall, the

    cannon that booms. Solid. Robust. Focused. The

    last word is the key. He loves the game deeply but

    without the eccentricities of the romantic. There is

    a match to be won at all times.

    But Tendulkar too was a sapling once. And his

    brother Ajit sheltered him from the gale, kept him

    focused. Sachin looked after his cricket, Ajit looked

    after Sachin. Twenty-two years ago, I was asked

    bySportsworldto doan articleon this

    extraordinary schoolboy. It wasn't Sachin I had to

    speak to, it was Ajit. When the time for the interview came, at Ramakant Achrekar's net in Shivaji Park,

    The battle within: Tendulkar walks off, having scored a hundred

    in the game against Kenya in the 1999 World Cup Getty Images

    Related LinksPlayers/Officials:Sachin TendulkarTeams:India

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    Ajit was there with a cyclostyled copy of Sachin's scores. And Achrekar admonished me for spoiling his

    child, for fear that Sachin would get distracted.

    The interview was done. Sachin was neither overwhelmed nor garrulous; indeed he was so limited with

    his words that you had to hold on to every one of them. It was sent to Sportsworldin Calcutta by courier

    (or was it just put into a normal post box?) and then came a request for two photographs. Again it was

    Ajit who produced them. When I got the cheque, I noticed they had paid me an extra 100 rupees for the

    photographs. They weren't mine but Sportsworldhad a policy of paying for them and so I wrote out a

    cheque to Ajit for Rs 100. It was acknowledged and accepted gratefully. We lived in different times then!

    It was also my first realisation that young men in the public eye needed to be sheltered so they could

    focus on playing cricket; that they needed an elder brother, or an equivalent, to put a gentle hand on the

    shoulder and, occasionally, lay one the back side. A lot of other young men today see Tendulkar's runs,

    eye his wealth, but their brattishness comes in the way of noticing his work ethic. For Tendulkar's life is

    not the story of extraordinary ability but of an extraordinary work ethic.

    Twelve years later, on a cold evening in Bristol, preparing for a World Cup game against Kenya the next

    day, I saw him in dark glasses, fiddling around with his kit. Aimlessly, like he was searching forsomething to do. At most times he would be bounding around with energy, bowling off 18 yards, taking

    catches, shouting thoughts to other batsmen.

    I approached him hesitantly, I couldn't see his eyes because they were shrouded by these huge dark

    glasses, probably the only time they were used to cover rather than to adorn, for he had just lost his

    father. I asked him if he would talk to us about coming back to play. He nodded his head and only briefly

    took the glasses off. His eyes were red and swollen; you could see he had been crying copiously. For the

    interview he put them on, and once the camera had stopped rolling, admitted he didn't want to return,

    that his mind was all over the place, that he felt anchorless. It was the only time he didn't want to play

    for India but he had been forced back by his family, aware that only cricket could help him overcome his

    grief. When he got a hundred the next day and looked heavenwards, some other eyes were moist. Evenin his grief there was resolve, for he wanted that century. It might only have been Kenya but he was

    battling himself, not the bowlers.

    Four years later he agreed to do an interview for a

    series of programmes I was then doing. Our

    producer thought we would make it special, and to

    our surprise and joy, Amitabh Bachchan agreed to

    introduce the programme. In the first break Sachin

    whispered, "That was a beautiful surprise." Little

    did he know there was more to come.

    Sometime earlier he had told me he was a big fan of Mark Knopfler and we thought it would be great if

    we could get the great Dire Straits man to talk to us.

    "I'm recording all night but immediately after that, before I fall asleep," Knopfler said, and somehow we

    persuaded Sachin to do the programme in the afternoon rather than in the morning. And when the

    moment came, we patched the line on and when I said, "Hello Mark," Sachin looked puzzled. A minute

    later his eyes lit up when he realised which Mark we had on the line. And then he was like a child,

    It has been fantastic having a ringside viewof this journey, watching a cricketer, and a

    person, grow. But one thing hasn't changed.He still approaches every game like a childwould a bar of chocolate, feeling happy and

    fortunate

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    tongue-tied, fidgety, excited - much like most people are when they first meet Tendulkar. Even the stars

    can get starry-eyed!

    And there have been moments of surprising candour. When asked, as batsmen tend to be, which bowlers

    had troubled him the most, he smiled an almost embarrassed smile and said, "You won't believe this."

    When probed, he said, "Pedro Collins and Hansie Cronje."

    "In fact," he said, "I once told my partner 'Will you please take Hansie for me? I don't mind playing Allan

    Donald'"

    Tendulkar's batting has been much chronicled over the years. Indeed, I believe he has been the most

    analysed cricketer in the history of the game. Yet he has found the urge, and indeed the solutions, to

    play on for 20 years. Now that is a landmark to be celebrated, not the many inconsequential others that

    we exploit for our own need. It has been fantastic having a ringside view of this journey, watching a

    cricketer, and a person, grow. But one thing hasn't changed. He still approaches every game like a child

    would a bar of chocolate, feeling happy and fortunate.

    Read the Sportsworld article from 1988hereHarsha Bhogle is a commentator, television presenter and writer

    Feeds: Harsha Bhogle

    A giant's peaksTwo decades of highlights: we look back at the jewels in Tendulkar's crown

    Cricinfo staffNovember 13, 2009

    Text size:A| A

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    119 not out v England, Old Trafford, 1990

    England pile up519 on a benign pitch,and India

    reply with 432. England stretch the lead to 407,

    and though the pitch is still good and the bowling

    (Devon Malcolm, Angus Fraser, Chris Lewis, Edie

    Hemmings) not terribly menacing, India findthemselves in deep water at 127 for 5 with only

    one recognised batsman left. And he's only 17

    years old. Tendulkar battles for nearly four hours,

    grimly but never dourly, and ends the day with

    119. India lose only one more wicket, finishing

    with 343. With one more session, they might even

    have won.

    114 v Australia, Perth, 1991-92

    The fastest pitch in Australia has been reserved

    for thelast Test.India have been beaten already,only humiliation awaits. Batting first, Australia

    score 346. Tendulkar enters at a relatively

    comfortable 100 for 3, but watches the next five

    wickets go down for 59. Tendulkar is the next man

    out... at 240. He has scored 118 of the 140 runs

    added while he is at the crease, and has made

    them in such an awe-inspiring manner that

    commentators ask themselves when they last saw

    an innings as good.

    169 v South Africa, Cape Town, 1996-97Batting first, South Africa make amatch-winning 529.

    Playing only for honour, India find themselves grovelling before Allan Donald, Shaun Pollock, Brian

    McMillan and Lance Klusener. Tendulkar and Mohammad Azharuddin get together at 58 for 5, and start

    spanking the bowling as if they were playing a club game. They add 222 for the sixth wicket in less than

    two sessions, and Tendulkar has 26 boundaries in his score of 169. Donald, by his own admission, felt

    like applauding.

    155 not out v Australia, Chennai, 1997-98

    Seventy-one runs in arrears, India start thesecond inningsand despite Navjot Singh Sidhu's 64 find

    themselves only 44 in front when Tendulkar joins Rahul Dravid. The duo has to contend with Shane

    Warne bowling from round the wicket and into the rough. Tendulkar, who has practised against LaxmanSivaramakrishnan and a few other bowlers on artificially created rough patches before the series, decides

    to take apart Warne. In a breathtaking assault, with the match hanging in the balance, he deploys his

    unique slog sweeps against the spin to steer India past Australia and snatch a match-winning 347-run

    lead.

    Twin centuries v Australia, Sharjah, 1997-98

    India are chasing Australia's 284, but more importantly they need to score 254 to beat New Zealand on

    Tendulkar's 98 against Pakistan in Centurion was one of the best

    innings of the 2003 World Cup Neil Lane

    Related LinksPlayers/Officials:Sachin TendulkarTeams:India

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    net run-rate and make their way to the final. Single-handedly Tendulkar takes India close to the cut-off

    when sandstorms disrupt play. Just when India's prospects of making it to the final look bleak, Tendulkar

    not only takes them beyond the target, but for a brief while lets them entertain hopes of a win.

    Twin centuries v Australia, Sharjah, 1997-98

    It couldn't have got better. It does. Two days later, at the same venue, chasing a similar total, 273, to

    win the final, Tendulkar decimates the Australian attack. By the time he is out in the 45th over, he has

    left India only 25 more to get. Shane Warne is so devastated he confesses Tendulkar hits him for sixes in

    his nightmares.

    141 and 4 for 38 v Australia, Dhaka, 1997-98

    Six months after having destroyed the Aussie bowlers' psyches, Tendulkar meets them again in a big-

    match environment:the semi-final of the ICC Champions Trophy.

    And again, single-handedly he puts Australia out of the game with his third century against them in three

    matches. His 141 comes in 128 balls, and India are 280 in the 46th over when he gets out. To put the

    matter beyond doubt, Tendulkar kills an interesting contest by dismissing Steve Waugh, Michael Bevan,

    and Damien Martyn with 4 for 38.

    136 v Pakistan, Chennai, 1998-99

    Few Indian batting performances have been as

    heroic, or as tragic. Chasing271 in the fourth

    inningsof a low-scoring match, India experience a

    familiar top-order collapse, and are sinking fast at

    82 for 5. Tendulkar finds an able ally in Nayan

    Mongia, and rebuilds the innings in a painstaking,

    un-Tendulkar-like manner. After helping add 136

    for the sixth wicket, Mongia departs to an ungainly

    pull. Tendulkar, whose back is giving way, shifts

    up a gear or two and starts dealing in boundaries.

    But one error of judgment and it's all over. Saqlain

    Mushtaq defeats the intended lofted on-drive with

    a magical ball that drifts the other way, catches

    the outer part of Tendulkar's bat and balloons up

    to mid-off. The tail disgrace themselves, and India

    fall short by a gut-wrenching 13 runs.

    233 not out v Tamil Nadu, Mumbai, 1999-

    2000

    It's aRanji semi-finalagainst a strong Tamil Nadu,

    and Mumbai are looking down the barrel after

    their bowlers have given away 485 runs. A first-innings lead is crucial, and Mumbai look down for the

    count at 127 for 4 when old pal Vinod Kambli joins Tendulkar and they see Mumbai out of trouble. They

    are not anywhere near home when Kambli falls with the score on 266. Tendulkar then takes charge, and

    with the lower order, sees Mumbai just past Tamil Nadu's total and into a final Mumbai go on to win. It is

    just the kind of against-the-odds match-winning knock that has eluded him at international level, which is

    perhaps why he ranks it among his best in all forms.

    The first match-winning fourth-innings century, in Chennai

    against England in 2008 AFP

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    155 v South Africa, Bloemfontein, 2001-02

    On the first day of anoverseas series,India's plight is a familiar one - four down for 68, with all the

    wickets going just the way the South Africans planned - to rising balls. Tendulkar has a debutant for

    company, with another to follow. He takes 17 balls to score his first run, but 101 come off the next 97

    deliveries. It isn't the prettiest of Tendulkar's Test tons, but it is one of the most savage, characterised by

    pulls and vicious upper-cuts. The South Africans have a plan for India, and Tendulkar makes a mockeryof it. By the time his innings ends, India are reasonably well placed, though they go on to lose the Test.

    98 v Pakistan, Centurion, 2003

    Tendulkar has been compelled to live thisWorld Cup matchagainst Pakistan for a year in advance. He

    does not sleep well for 12 nights going into the match. Faced with a target of 274, Tendulkar shows no

    anxiety whatsoever. Or is it that nervous energy? He finishes his hyped battle against Shoaib Akhtar in

    the latter's first over with an uppercut for six, and then a flick and a straight block for two boundaries.

    Every bowler is dealt with with similar disdain. Tendulkar has not looked as pumped up before. And

    although he misses a century, he leaves the match sealed in the 28th over.

    117 not out v Australia, Sydney, 2007-08

    Going into thefirst finalof the CB Series, Tendulkar has not achieved many things: an ODI century in

    Australia, a century in 37 innings, a chase-winning century since 2001, a century in any chase since

    March 2004. In a 235-minute masterclass, he washes it all away, scoring 117 off 120 balls and leading

    India to the 240-run target on a difficult wicket just about solo. He dominates in the initial overs,

    shepherds the tentative middle order, and stays unbeaten to see the side home.

    37 and 103 not out v England, Chennai, 2008-09

    Tendulkar has to his name every batting record worth having, except one perhaps: a fourth-innings

    century in an Indian win. Having struggled against the spin of Graeme Swann and Monty Panesar in the

    first innings of theChennai Test, India are left to chase 387 on a deteriorating pitch. The explosive start

    is provided by Virender Sehwag, and the final touches by Yuvraj Singh, but in the middle Tendulkar

    nurtures the chase, hardly ever looking under pressure, scampering through for singles like a teenager,

    breaking the shackles every now and then with the odd boundary. The last of those fours finishes the

    chase, and brings up the elusive century. It works a treat that it has come at the venue that was the

    scene of heartbreak nine years before, against Pakistan, and weeks after one of India's worst terror

    attacks. With Tendulkar, India smiles again.

    175 v Australia, Hyderabad, 2009-10 Australia have amassed a massive 350 on a flat pitch inHyderabad,

    and Tendulkar almost chases it down single-handedly. He displays through the innings how he has

    mastered the art of scoring quick runs without taking any risks. The only support comes from Virender

    Sehwag (38) and Suresh Raina (59). Tendulkar, who scores 175 off 141 balls, gives hardly a chance

    through the classic. When he does take risks, it's worth preserving the shots in an album: stepping out to

    spinners, lofting straight down the ground; the unbelievably late flicks and the even later late cuts. It all

    ends in heartbreak, though: in Chennai in 1999, Tendulkar, having played an innings just as incredible,

    left the last three wickets 17 to get; on this night he leaves them 19 off 17. The rest choke like they did

    in Chennai.

    India's proudest possessionTendulkar has gone two decades being a blend of the sublime and the precise, incapable of ugliness or ofbeing dull; and those are among the least of his achievements

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    Peter RoebuckNovember 14, 2009

    Comments: 167| Text size:A| A

    Sachin Tendulkarhas been playing top-class

    cricket for 20 years and he's still producing

    blistering innings, still looking hungry, still

    demolishing attacks, still a prized wicket, still a

    proud competitor. He has not merely been around

    for two decades. From his first outing to his most

    recent effort, a stunning 175 in Hyderabad, he has

    been a great batsman. Longevity counts amongst

    his strengths. Twenty years! It's a heck of a long

    time, and it's gone in the blink of an eye.

    The Berlin Wall was taken down a week before

    Sachin Tendulkar first wore the colours of his

    country, Nelson Mandela was behind bars, Allan

    Border was captaining Australia, and India was a

    patronised country known for its dust, poverty,

    timid batsmen and not much else. In those days

    Tendulkar was a tousle-haired cherub prepared to

    stand his ground against all comers, including

    Wasim Akram and the most menacing of the Australans, Merv Hughes. Now he is a tousle-haired elder

    still standing firm, still driving and cutting, still retaining some of the impudence of youth, but nowadays

    bearing also the sagacity of age.

    It has been an incredible journey, a trip that figures alone cannot define. Not that the statistics lack

    weight. To the contrary they are astonishing, almost mind-boggling. Tendulkar has scored an avalanche

    of runs, thousands upon thousands of them in every form of the game. He has reached three figures 87times in the colours of his country, and all the while has somehow retained his freshness, somehow

    avoided the mechanical, the repetitive and the predictable.

    Perhaps that has been part of it, the ability to retain the precious gift of youth. Alongside Shane Warne,

    the Indian master has been the most satisfying cricketer of his generation.

    Tendulkar's feats are prodigious. He has scored as many runs overseas as in his backyard, has flogged

    Brett Lee at his fastest and Shane Warne at his most obtuse, has flourished against swing and cut,

    prospered in damp and dry. Nor can his record be taken for granted. Batsmen exist primarily to score

    runs. It is a damnably difficult task made to look easy by a handful of expert practitioners. Others have

    promised and fallen back, undone by the demands, unable to meet the moment. Tendulkar has keptgoing, on his toes, seeking runs in his twinkling way.

    In part he has lasted so long because there has been so little inner strain. It's hard to think of a player

    remotely comparable who has spent so little energy conquering himself. Throughout, Tendulkar has been

    able to concentrate on overcoming his opponents.

    But it has not only been about runs. Along the way Tendulkar has provided an unsurpassed blend of the

    sublime and the precise. In him the technical and the natural sit side by side, friends not enemies, allies

    It's never been hard for Tendulkar to play cricket. The hard part

    will be stopping Associated Press

    Related LinksPlayers/Officials:Sachin TendulkarTeams:IndiaSites:Cricinfo ICC Site

    http://www.cricinfo.com/sachinat20/content/current/story/434360.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/sachinat20/content/current/story/434360.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/sachinat20/content/current/story/434360.html#commentshttp://www.cricinfo.com/sachinat20/content/current/story/434360.html#commentshttp://www.cricinfo.com/ci/content/player/35320.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/ci/content/player/35320.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/ci/content/player/35320.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/ci/content/player/35320.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/ci/content/player/35320.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/india/content/team/6.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/india/content/team/6.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/india/content/team/6.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/ci/content/site/297120.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/ci/content/site/297120.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/ci/content/site/297120.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/ci/content/site/297120.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/india/content/team/6.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/ci/content/player/35320.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/ci/content/player/35320.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/sachinat20/content/current/story/434360.html#commentshttp://www.cricinfo.com/sachinat20/content/current/story/434360.html
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    deep in conversation. Romantics talk about those early morning trips to Shivaji Park, and the child eager

    to erect the nets and anxious to bat till someone took his wicket. They want to believe that toil alone can

    produce that straight drive and a bat so broad that periodically it is measured. But it was not like that.

    From the start the lad had an uncanny way of executing his strokes perfectly. His boyhood coaches insist

    that their role was to ensure that he remained unspoilt. There was no apprenticeship. Tendulkar was

    born to bat.

    Over the decades it has been Tendulkar's rare combination of mastery and boldness that has delighted

    connoisseurs and crowds alike. More than any other batsman, even Brian Lara, Tendulkar's batting has

    provoked gasps of admiration. A single withering drive dispatched along the ground, eluding the bowler,

    placed unerringly between fieldsmen, can provoke wonder even amongst the oldest hands. A solitary

    square cut is enough to make a spectator's day.

    Tendulkar might lose his wicket cheaply but he is incapable of playing an ugly stroke. His defence might

    have been designed by Christopher Wren. And alongside these muscular orthodoxies could be found

    ornate flicks through the on-side, glides off his bulky pads that sent tight deliveries dashing on

    unexpected journeys into the back and beyond. Viv Richards could terrorise an attack with pitilessbrutality, Lara could dissect bowlers with surgical and magical strokes, Tendulkar can take an attack

    apart with towering simplicity.

    Nor has Tendulkar ever stooped to dullness or

    cynicism. Throughout, his wits have remained sharp

    and originality has been given its due. He has, too,

    been remarkably constant. In those early

    appearances, he relished the little improvisations

    calculated to send bowlers to the madhouse:

    cheeky strokes that told of ability and nerve. For a time thereafter he put them into the cupboard, not

    because respectability beckoned or responsibility weighed him down but because they were not required.Shot selection, his very sense of the game, counts amongst his qualities.

    On his most recent trip to Australia, though, he decided to restore audacity, cheekily undercutting lifters,

    directing the ball between fieldsmen, shots the bowlers regarded as beyond the pale. Even in middle age

    he remains unbroken. Hyderabad confirmed his durability.

    And yet, even this, the runs, the majesty, the thrills, does not capture his achievement. Reflect upon his

    circumstances and then marvel at his feat. Here is a man obliged to put on disguises so that he can move

    around the streets, a fellow able to drive his cars only in the dead of night for fear or creating a

    commotion, a father forced to take his family to Iceland on holiday, a person whose entire adult life has

    been lived in the eye of a storm. Throughout he has been public property, India's proudest possession, a

    young man and yet also a source of joy for millions, a sportsman and yet, too, an expression of a vast

    and ever-changing nation. Somehow he has managed to keep the world in its rightful place. Somehow he

    has raised children who relish his company and tease him about his batting. Whenever he loses his

    wicket in the 90s, a not uncommon occurrence, his boy asks why he does not "hit a sixer".

    Somehow he has emerged with an almost untarnished reputation. Inevitably mistakes have been made.

    Something about a car, something else about a cricket ball, and suggestions that he had stretched the

    In part Tendulkar has lasted so long becausethere has been so little inner strain. It's hardto think of a player remotely comparable whohas spent so little energy conquering himself

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    facts to assist his pal Harbhajan Singh. But then he is no secular saint. It's enough that he is expected to

    bat better than anyone else. It's hardly fair to ask him to match Mother Teresa as well.

    At times India has sprung too quickly to his defence, as if a point made against him was an insult to the

    nation, as if he were beyond censure. A poor lbw decision- and he has had his allocation- can all too

    easily be turned into a cause celebre. Happily Tendulkar has always retained his equanimity. He is a

    sportsman as well as a cricketer. By no means has it been the least of his contributions, and it explains

    his widespread popularity. Not even Placido Domingo has been given more standing ovations.

    And there has been another quality that has sustained him, a trait whose importance cannot be

    overstated. Not long ago Keith Richards, lead guitarist with the Rolling Stones, was asked how the band

    had kept going for so long, spent so many decades on the road, made so many records, put up with so

    much attention. His reply was as simple as it as telling. "We love it," he explained, "we just love playing."

    And so it has always been with Tendulkar. It's never been hard for him to play cricket. The hard part will

    be stopping. But he will take into retirement a mighty record and the knowledge that he has given

    enormous pleasure to followers of the game wherever it is played.

    Peter Roebuck is a former captain of Somerset and the author, most recently, ofIn It to Win It. This article was firstpublished inSportstarmagazine

    Feeds: Peter Roebuck

    Tendulkar smacks Shoaib aroundFirst came a six, then a four, then divine magic

    Rahul BhattacharyaSeptember 13, 2009

    Text size:A| A

    http://www.cricinfo.com/rss/content/story/feeds/magazine.rss?author=241
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    Centurion, 1 March 2003

    Sachin Tendulkarhas never batted better than in

    the World Cup of 2003, and during it never better

    than for three famous deliveries against Shoaib

    Akhtarin Centurion.

    This was a match Tendulkar said he was

    compelled to live a year in advance. Everywhere

    he went, people reminded him about the 1st of

    March, the fixture against Pakistan. Consequently

    he did not sleep properly for 12 nights leading up.

    Facing a handsome target, Tendulkar shed his

    pent-up anxiety with three strokes in Shoaib's

    opening over to jumpstart a classic innings. The

    first of them - reaching out (were he not so

    pumped up, he would have surely let it pass for awide), at once cutting and tipping, very high over

    the square third-man boundary - would become

    an icon, for cricketing merit; its sheer thrill, and

    nationalist symbolism, a sort of belated rebuff to

    the Miandad six.

    The second stroke was his lovely trademark - back

    in the crease and with swirling wrists diverting a

    reasonable delivery to square leg. But the third

    shot - the third shot.

    A little trot across to off stump, block, down the

    ground to the on, four. No back-lift, no follow-

    through: none needed. I have never seen such a

    concisely expressed cricket stroke. He simply met

    the ball and the entire execution began there and finished there. And by now the crowd, the most vividly

    alive of the tournament, had gone quite wild. Visually it was like a cinematic special effect: everything

    moved in a blur - flags, roars, horns, waves, the ball, Shoaib - and amid it Sachin and his pure stroke

    appeared magically frozen.

    Rahul Bhattacharya is the author ofPundits from Pakistan: On Tour with India, 2003-04. This article was first published inthe print version ofCricinfo Magazine

    Feeds: Rahul Bhattacharya

    The saintHis purity of technique and image make him an icon with more than a touch of the divine

    Greg BaumNovember 1, 2003

    Text size:A| A

    The first cut: the six over third man Getty Images

    Related Links

    Players/Officials:Sachin TendulkarMatches:India v Pakistan at CenturionSeries/Tournaments:ICC World CupTeams:India|PakistanOther links:50 Magic Moments

    http://www.cricinfo.com/ci/content/player/35320.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/ci/content/player/35320.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/ci/content/match/65268.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/ci/content/match/65268.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/ci/content/match/65268.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/ci/content/player/35320.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/ci/content/player/35320.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/ci/content/player/35320.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/ci/engine/match/65268.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/ci/engine/match/65268.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/ci/engine/match/65268.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/ci/content/series/61124.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/ci/content/series/61124.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/ci/content/series/61124.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/india/content/team/6.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/india/content/team/6.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/india/content/team/6.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/pakistan/content/team/7.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/pakistan/content/team/7.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/pakistan/content/team/7.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/ci/content/url/387507.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/ci/content/url/387507.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/ci/content/url/387507.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/rss/content/story/feeds/magazine.xml?author=236http://www.cricinfo.com/ci/content/url/387507.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/pakistan/content/team/7.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/india/content/team/6.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/ci/content/series/61124.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/ci/engine/match/65268.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/ci/content/player/35320.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/rss/content/story/feeds/magazine.xml?author=236http://www.cricinfo.com/ci/content/match/65268.htmlhttp://www.cricinfo.com/ci/content/player/35320.html
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    The two keenest appreciations of Sachin Tendulkar were made from

    vantage points that could not have been more opposite to each other, and

    together serve as an incontrovertible cross-reference to his greatness. The

    first was Sir Donald Bradman's famous remark to his wife during the1996

    World Cup that Tendulkar put him in mind of how he himself batted.

    The second is the widespread understanding in the cricket community that

    match-fixers will not successfully get on with their crooked business until

    Tendulkar is out, and an anecdotal account of how Tendulkar once

    unwittingly ruined a fix by batting too blissfully well.

    It must be understood that neither reflection would have been made

    lightly. Sir Donald was not given to hyperbole or glibness, but rather was

    precise in everything he did and said. Nor would the fixers have bothered

    with throwaway lines.

    Together, these tributes convey immutable impressions of Tendulkar that

    accord with less quantifiable, more aesthetic understandings of the glory ofhis batsmanship, Here is a man capable of changing the course of any

    game. Here is a man incorruptible in the face of the venal temptations that so many of his peers could

    not resist. Outside the laws or outside the off stump, he could not be lured. Here is a man not susceptible

    to human failing in any endeavour, a man not so much invincible as invulnerable.

    Here is a man whose name is synonymous with purity, of technique, philosophy and image. If Ian

    Botham can be seen as the Errol Flynn of cricket, or Viv Richards as the Martin Luther King, or Shane

    Warne as the Marilyn Monroe, or Muttiah Muralitharan as the hobbit, Tendulkar is surely the game's

    secular saint.

    Right from the beginning, he appeared to be touched by divinity. He came among us as a boy-god,unannounced. He was 16 and was hit on the head in his first appearance, but neither flinched nor

    retreated a step. Nothing thenceforth could harm him, temporal or otherwise. He was short and stocky -

    like all the best - and mop-topped and guileless to behold. He has scarcely changed since.

    Tendulkar was born with extravagant natural talent, but he was also driven and indefatigable. When a

    boy, he would bat from dawn to dusk, and even a little beyond. As with all the greats, he came not from

    another dimension, nor the mystical east, but from the nets. By such dedication, he came to understand

    intimately his own gift, and at length to lavish it upon others.

    That Sachin Tendulkar

    stands tall everyday

    with eyes watching hisevery move is a

    wonder Getty Images

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    His movements at the crease are small but exact. He said once that he did

    not believe in footwork for its conventional purpose, because the tempo of

    Test cricket did not permit a batsman the textbook indulgence of getting to

    the pitch of the ball. Rather, he thought of footwork as a means of

    balancing himself up at the crease so that each shot was hit just as he

    meant it. He scores predominantly through the off side, an unusualcharacteristic for such a heavy run-maker, but of course he can play every

    shot.

    Tendulkar's method promotes an air of calm, reassurance and poise at the

    crease. Brian Lara's batting is characterised by explosion and violence, and

    Steve Waugh's by grim resolve, but Tendulkar's ways are timeless. His

    battles with Shane Warne, genius versus genius, have been for the ages. It

    is said that the common element to concepts of beauty among all peoples

    is symmetry, a balance between all the parts. So it is with Tendulkar's

    batting.

    How easily he carries the hopes and takes responsibility for the well being

    of untold millions on that impossible subcontinent; in this, he is also divine.

    All eyes are upon him, day and night, but no scandal has attached itself, not in his private life nor in his

    cricket endeavours. Across the land, he is the little man on the big posters and hoardings, creating a kind

    of reverse Big Brother effect; he is not watching them, but they are watching him. Still he stands tall.

    Sometimes petty criticism is made that he fails India in its hours of need, but it is not borne out by the

    figures, and besides, no one man could take upon his shoulders all of India's needy hours. Just 30, he

    has already made more than 50 international centuries.

    When called upon, he also bowls intelligently, if sparingly. He is sure in the field. There is even about

    him, as there was about many saints, something of the ingenu. He is not a natural captain for themodern era because he can lead only by example. He does not have a charismatic presence in a cricket

    stadium, but rather fills it in a different way, as the one certainty in a sea of doubt. Batting is the most

    fraught of sporting pursuits because even for the best the end is only ever one ball away. Tendulkar

    seems to turn that verity upon itself.

    As Tendulkar put Bradman in mind of himself, so he puts others in mind of Bradman. Once I was on a

    night train winding down from Simla to Kalka that stopped halfway for refreshments at a station lit by

    flaming torches. On a small television screen wreathed in cigarette smoke in the corner of the dining

    room Tendulkar was batting in a match in Mumbai. No one moved or spoke or looked away. The train

    was delayed by 20 minutes. Not until Tendulkar was out could the world resume its normal timetables

    and rhythms.

    This piece first appeared in the November 2003 issue of Wisden Asia Cricket.

    Greg Baum is a writer with the MelbourneAge.. This article was first published in the November 2003 issue ofWisden AsiaCricketmagazine

    'Here is a man not

    susceptible to humanfailing in any

    endeavour, a man not

    so much invincible asinvulnerable' Afp

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    If you try to hit a six I will hit you on the bum.Sachin Tendulkar's warning to Virender Sehwag during the Test against Pakistan in Multan, 2004. Sehwag reached histriple century with a six.

    Sep 17, 2009

    I'll chew his ear off.Phillip Hughes vows to talk shop with Sachin Tendulkar in Mumbai

    Aug 30, 2009

    Twenty20 cricket is the dessert and you can't survive on that. Who wants to eat onlydesserts?Sachin Tendulkar resorts to a food analogy to explain the pecking order of cricket's formats

    Aug 6, 2009

    Maybe they all think it's my last tour.Sachin Tendulkar on the standing ovations he gets wherever he plays in the world.

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    Mar 20, 2009

    I used to receive letters written in blood, but not anymore.Sachin Tendulkar reflects on how the adulation directed at him has changed over the years

    Feb 19, 2009

    A batsman is so much covered with protective gears that one might say [Sachin] Tendulkar isplaying if I go in the middle to bat.

    MS Gill, the Indian sports minister, clearly feels today's cricketers have it far easier than those of the pastJan 23, 2009

    Tall peaks are not always better than long plateaus as true greatness must include protractedexcellence.TheICCexplains why their idea of including Matthew Hayden in their list of all-time greats, while excluding the likes ofSachin Tendulkar and Brian Lara, wasn't such a great one after all

    Jan 15, 2009

    I couldn't sleep all this time. I am numb. The images keep playing in my head. This was just notan attack on Mumbai, it is an attack on India.Sachin Tendulkar recounts the horrors of watching the terrorist attacks on his hometown

    Dec 2, 2008

    Sachin and Sehwag are also spectacular, but when in full flow Yuvraj really stands out.Mahendra Singh Dhonipraises Yuvraj Singh

    Nov 19, 2008

    It was like holding a Rolex watch and a Patek Phillipe watch and saying which one looks bestAndrew Symonds pays tribute to the batting of Laxman and Tendulkar in the 2008 Sydney Test, in his book Roy on theRise

    Nov 14, 2008

    That Porsche comment ... why would I say that to Tendulkar? He's got aeroplanes.England wicketkeeper Matt Prior says the infamous "I drive a Porsche, what car do you drive?" sledge to Sachin Tendulkardidn't happen

    Oct 27, 2008

    We don't need him to say these things [about Tendulkar] just because he is retired.Harbhajan Singh delivers his take on the Gilchrist-Tendulkar affair

    Oct 25, 2008

    The archives recall not one single incriminating incident, not one drunken escapade, not onereported affair, not one spat with a team-mate or reporter ... As Matthew Parris wondered of BarackObama in these pages recently, is he human?Michael Athertonponders the sinless Sachin Tendulkar in theTimes

    Oct 19, 2008

    I'm so disappointed at what's being written and said about Anil Kumble ... He's been around forover 18 years and his achievements do all the talking.Sachin Tendulkardefends his team-mate

    Oct 19, 2008

    Why did you get out to such a silly shot?Anjali Tendulkar tells off her record-breaking husband for a poor stroke.

    Oct 18, 2008

    To me he will not just be remembered as a great player and a lovely human being, but assomebody who tried to learn Bengali for the last 14 years but never managed to do so!Sourav Ganguly pays a sort of tribute to Sachin Tendulkar

    Oct 18, 2008

    I don't know how they can figure out what's going on in my mind when sometimes I myself can'tfigure that out.Journalists work in mysterious ways, Sachin Tendulkarfinds out

    Oct 17, 2008

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    Success is a process... During that journey sometimes there are stones thrown at you, and youconvert them into milestones.Sachin Tendulkar in an interview at the end of the day he went past Brian Lara to become the leading run-scorer in Testcricket

    Oct 17, 2008

    I think you are at the wrong press conference.

    Sachin Tendulkar answers a query about his retirement plansSep 18, 2008

    "Even my father's name is Sachin Tendulkar.Tendulkar's daughter, Sara, tells her class her father's name after the teacher informs them of a restaurant of the samename in Mumbai

    May 31, 2008

    Performance is one thing, performing back to back is something else. People may call him[Tendulkar] a sitting elephant, but he's the best. He never said a word, and wanted to let his bat dothe talking.Mahendra Singh Dhoni speaks for his veteran team-mate

    Mar 8, 2008

    With Tendulkar, it's like the elephant in the room that no one wants to talk about.Sanjay Manjrekar wonders why Sachin Tendulkar's failures, especially while chasing, are not questioned by the media

    Feb 28, 2008

    With Sachin Tendulkar and Brian Lara, it was better to be friends and make them smile ratherthan wind them up.Sledging doesn't work with all players, warns Shane Warne

    Feb 10, 2008

    I now know what Sachin Tendulkar feels every time he bats in India.Adam Gilchrist soaks it up while batting in his final Twenty20 in front of a packed MCG

    Feb 6, 2008

    Sometimes I need to look at the scoreboard to figure out whether I'm batting hundred-plus orwhether I am on zero.Sachin Tendulkar struggles to distinguish between his standing ovations for entering the pitch and then for getting hishalf-century and century.

    Jan 30, 2008

    Commit all your crimes when Sachin is batting. They will go unnoticed because even the Lord iswatching.

    A placard at the SCG when Sachin Tendulkar was on his way to a magnificent century

    Jan 9, 2008

    He is my hero and playing against him is a special moment in my life. I cherish that.Sachin Tendulkar reflects on playing against Viv Richards during a Yorkshire-Glamorgan county match

    Dec 2, 2007

    He loves India. He has named his child India. His biggest player is actually Tendulkar. Right nowI'm hoping Tendulkar does not hit a catch to him because he will probably drop it to watch himbat.Irving Romaine on team-mate Lionel Cann, who is just a bit overawed by being at the World Cup

    Mar 3, 2007It really surprises me ... you are so consistent and I'm not

    Sachin Tendulkar, on his 33rd birthday, thanks the media for their unwavering love and affection and assures himself of agood press into the bargain

    Apr 25, 2006

    The positions of Jupiter and Mars are not good. I wish I am wrong but this is what the starstell.Abdullah Shaukat Chowdhry, a 70-year-old astrologer from Lahore, predicts that the end is nigh. The end of SachinTendulkar's career, that is ...

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    Jun 4, 2005

    Come on, his sleeves are absolutely unique.A female fan in Kolkata explains how to recognise Sachin Tendulkar

    Dec 6, 2004

    Nothing bad can happen to us if we're on a plane in India with Sachin Tendulkar on it.Hashim Amla, the South African batsman, reassures himself as he boards a flight

    Dec 2, 2004Sachin Tendulkar is, in my time, the best player without doubt - daylight second, Brian Lara

    third.Shane Warne delights the Indian press with his views on batting greats of this era

    Oct 8, 2004

    If you get Dravid, great. If you get Sachin, brilliant. If you get Laxman, it's a miracle.Brett Lee repeats the words of wisdom of his former captain, Steve Waugh

    Sep 27, 2004

    The thing about India is that while they will miss Sachin, they have the ability to put out anotherbatsman nearly as good.Michael Vaughan gives overestimation a new meaning before the first match of the NatWest Challenge

    Aug 31, 2004

    Sometimes you get so engrossed in watching batsmen like Rahul Dravid and Sachin Tendulkarthat you lose focus on your job.Yasir Hameed tries to zero in on the exact reason for dropping a vital catch in the third Test at Rawalpindi

    Apr 13, 2004

    Sachin was so focused. He never looked like getting out. He was batting with single-mindeddevotion. It was truly remarkable. It was a lesson."Tennis legend Martina Navratilova joins the Sachin Tendulkar fan club after watching him bat at Sydney

    Feb 2, 2004

    You can never say that he is out of form. He is a volcano waiting to explode and we hope hedoesn't do that against us in the one-dayers."Daryl Tuffey hints that Sachin Tendulkar's modest form may be the calm before the storm

    Oct 22, 2003