Tendulkar at new heights as World Cup nears

LONDON, (Reuters) – Unruffled composure over two  decades, in the face of the world’s most hostile attacks and the  frenzied demands of a celebrity-fixated society, confirms the  true greatness of Sachin Tendulkar.

For a man in his 38th year, Tendulkar’s appetite for runs  remains unsated and his unrelenting determination to keep  wringing the utmost out of the gifts so lavishly bestowed on him  at birth is phenomenal.

So, too, is his ability to remain unaffected either on or  off the field by the relentless glare of public adulation which  makes a private life impossible in his native India.

No hint of scandal has touched the man who last weekend  became the first person to pass 14,000 test runs in the second  test against Australia and he remains the complete team player.

“It is about what I want to do for my team,” he said after  scoring his sixth test double-hundred in 171 tests and his 11th  century against the team who have dominated cricket during his  career. “And I will not compromise on that.”

Tendulkar has shown unqualified commitment to his team and  his sport since Pakistan’s Waqar Younis bloodied his mouth with  a short-pitched delivery in his debut test in 1990 at the age of  16. Eight days later he became the youngest man to score a test  half-century and 20 years on he holds the records for most test  and one-day runs and the most test and one-day centuries, a  scarcely believable 95 in total.

BRADMAN
ACCOLADE

The ultimate accolade came from Don Bradman, whose test  average of 99.94 dwarfs all his rivals before or since,  including Tendulkar whose current mark is just under 57.

Towards the end of his life Bradman, the first celebrity  cricketer, whose run-scoring feats for Australia in the depths  of the 1930s depression bolstered an emerging nation’s morale,  called his wife into the room to watch Tendulkar on television.

“I never saw myself play but I feel that this fellow is  playing much the same as I used to play, and she looked at him  on the television and said, yes, there is a similarity between  the two,” recalled Bradman, who was no more inclined to make  unconsidered statements that he had been to play rash shots.

“To me his compactness, his technique, his stroke  production, it all seemed to gel as far as I was concerned.”

Tendulkar scored his first test hundred at Old Trafford at  the age of 17 and he had still to celebrate his 20th birthday  when a century off the Australians at Perth won the unstinted  praise of cricket’s fiercest competitors.

The West Indian, Pakistani and South African fast bowlers at  the start of his career held no terrors. His later duels with  Shane Warne became the stuff of legend.

Tendulkar, who overtook compatriot Sunil Gavaskar’s world  record of 34 test centuries in 2006, has reserved his best for  Australia.

Under Steve Waugh, Australia fielded a side comparable to  Bradman’s 1948 Invincibles or Ian Chappell’s swaggering  buccaneers of the 1970s.

WARNE TAMED

They met their match in India in 1998 when Tendulkar  launched a sustained and successful assault on Warne, generally  regarded as the best spinner of all time, to average 111.50 in a  2-1 series win for India.

On Tuesday, while Warne fumed via Twitter on Ricky Ponting’s  field placings, Tendulkar was still Australia’s nemesis, scoring  the winning runs to give India a 2-0 series victory which  consolidated their place at the top of the world rankings.

Unsurprisingly the relentless demands of modern cricket have  taken their toll and Tendulkar was troubled by injuries to his  elbow and his shoulder and a slump in form in the middle of the  last decade. He rebounded to such effect that this year he was named the  International Cricket Council’s (ICC) cricketer of the year for  the first time, after averaging 81.84 in 10 tests during the  review period and 65.28 in 17 one-day internationals.

Tendulkar intends to play next year in the first World Cup  to be staged on the Indian sub-continent for 15 years, a  tournament which all India fervently hopes will give their team  the trophy for the first time since their upset victory over  West Indies in 1983.

That unexpected triumph sparked an explosion of one-day  cricket in India accompanied by a commercial boom which has  helped to make Tendulkar a wealthy man by any standards.

Wealth and fame, though, seem to have scarcely affected a  man whose work ethic has been a constant since he accumulated  prodigious scores as a schoolboy.
He was predictably named man-of-the-match and  man-of-the-series after the second test against Australia but  preferred to praise his team mates rather than talk about  himself. When he did it was with humility and respect for his  sport.

“I’ve played 20 years but that doesn’t mean that I know  everything about cricket,” Tendulkar said.

“It’s important to be a student of this game. That’s when  you can actually learn and get better. Learning never stops.”