Sachin Tendulkar has been the most complete batsman of his time, the
most prolific runmaker of all time, and arguably the biggest cricket
icon the game has ever known. His batting is based on the purest
principles: perfect balance, economy of movement, precision in
stroke-making, and that intangible quality given only to geniuses:
anticipation. If he doesn't have a signature stroke - the upright,
back-foot punch comes close - it is because he is equally proficient at
each of the full range of orthodox shots (and plenty of improvised ones
as well) and can pull them out at will.
There are no apparent weaknesses in
Tendulkar's game. He can score all around the wicket, off both front
foot and back, can tune his technique to suit every condition, temper
his game to suit every situation, and has made runs in all parts of the
world in all conditions.
Some of his
finest performances have come against Australia, the overwhelmingly
dominant team of his era. His century as a 19-year-old on a
lightning-fast pitch at the WACA is considered one of the best innings
ever to have been played in Australia. A few years later he received the
ultimate compliment from the ultimate batsman: Don Bradman confided to
his wife that Tendulkar reminded him of himself.
Blessed
with the keenest of cricket minds, and armed with a loathing for
losing, Tendulkar set about doing what it took to become one of the best
batsmen in the world. His greatness was established early: he was only
16 when he made his Test debut. He was hit on the mouth by Waqar Younis
but continued to bat, in a blood-soaked shirt. His first Test hundred, a
match-saving one at Old Trafford, came when he was 17, and he had 16
Test hundreds before he turned 25. In 2000 he became the first batsman
to have scored 50 international hundreds, in 2008 he passed Brian Lara
as the leading Test run-scorer, and in the years after, he went past
13,000 Test runs 30,000 international runs, and 50 Test hundreds.
He
currently holds the record for most hundreds in both Tests and ODIs -
remarkable, considering he didn't score his first ODI hundred till his
79th match. Incredibly, he retains a divine enthusiasm for the game: at
36 years and 306 days he broke a 40-year-old barrier by scoring the
first double-century in one-day cricket. In 2012, when just one month
short of his 39th birthday, he became the first player to score 100
international centuries, which like Bradman's batting average, could be a
mark that lasts for ever. Later that year, though, he announced his
retirement from ODIs after a disappointing 18 months in international
cricket.
Tendulkar's considerable
achievements seem greater still when looked at in the light of the
burden of expectations he has had to bear from his adoring but somewhat
unreasonable followers, who have been prone to regard anything less than
a hundred in each innings as a failure. The aura may have dimmed, if
only slightly, as the years on the international circuit have taken
their toll on the body, but Tendulkar remains, by a distance, the most
worshipped cricketer in the world.
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