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Monday 3 December 2012

Hope Sachin Tendulkar gets a ton at Eden: Sourav Ganguly

Hope Sachin Tendulkar gets a ton at Eden: Sourav Ganguly
KOLKATA: Facing criticism for his prolonged form slump, Indian batsman Sachin Tendulkargot some words of encouragement from his former captain and opening partner Sourav Ganguly ahead of the third cricket Test against England starting here on December 5.

Addressing a gathering which had all members of the Indian team, Ganguly said, "Many stories are being written about the match. I wish all the luck to Sachin. I hope he scores a ton at Eden Gardens."

Ganguly shared the dais with Tendulkar and Indian skipper Mahendra Singh Dhoni. Ganguly feels that India would bounce back to win the series.

"The series is levelled 1-1 but I hope India will win the series convincingly," he said.

England levelled the series after thrashing India by 10 wickets in the second Test in Mumbai. The fourth Test is scheduled in Nagpur (December 13-17).

Sachin Tendulkar was the best I played against: Ricky Ponting

Sachin Tendulkar was the best I played against: Ricky Ponting
SYDNEY: Cricketing great Ricky Ponting, who retired from all forms of the game after playing his last Test match at Perth against South Africa, on Monday, said India's Sachin Tendulkar is the best player he has played against.

On being asked about the most supreme batsmen of his era, Ponting said: "I feel Sachin was the best player I played against and that's coming from more of a captain's point of view as well, knowing he had so much success against us in our conditions and their conditions."

Ponting hung his boots after playing 168 Test matches, scoring 13,378 runs at an average of 51.85 with a highest of 257. He also scored 41 centuries and 62 half-centuries. In one-day internationals (ODI), the former Australia skipper played 375 matches scoring 13,704 runs, including 30 centuries with a highest score of 164.

Commenting further about other great batsmen he played against, as reported by a cricket website, he said: "I probably lost more sleep on the eve of games against (Brian) Lara because I knew he could single-handedly win games. The way I judge players has always been on their ability to win games by themselves. Lara could certainly do that and he did it probably more than what Sachin's done for India.

"You've got to put (Jacques) Kallis in that bracket as well. You put his wickets on top of what he's done with the bat. He came out the other day to bat and I looked at the board and he was averaging 57 in Test cricket. That's remarkable considering the amount he's had to bowl and all that sort of stuff. I've been pretty blessed to play in the era with so many great batsmen, and if my name gets mentioned among them, then that's great."

Ponting, who was part of three World Cup-winning squads in 1999, 2003 and 2007, having led in the latter two, said former pacers Curtly Ambrose of the West Indies and Pakistani Wasim Akram and India spinner Harbhajan Singh were the best bowlers he faced in his career.

"I think Curtly Ambrose and Wasim Akram were probably the two outstanding quicks that I faced, and for different reasons. Ambrose for his ability to just make you feel like you couldn't score off him for long periods of time, never felt like he was going to bowl you a bad ball. Akram for the exact opposite, you could get a few runs off him, but you just knew there was an unplayable ball around the corner, be it with an old ball or with a new ball.

"Harbhajan's probably the other one who caused me as much grief as anything. He got me out a lot of times and caused me a lot of grief. Those guys through their careers can all put their hand up and say they had my measure," said Ponting of Harbhajan, who dismissed the Tasmanian 10 times, including three ducks in Tests, more than any bowler Ponting's confronted.

Sunday 2 December 2012

Kumble hits out at Tendulkar's critics

Kumble hits out at Tendulkar's critics


Amidst the growing clamour for Sachin Tendulkar's retirement, former India skipper Anil Kumble on Thursday hit out at critics questioning the veteran batsman's place in the team, saying he should be left alone and given the "emotional space" and respect he deserves. Tendulkar's prolonged lean patch led many people to question his place in the Indian team but Kumble says it's not the time to point fingers at him but support him. "There have been instances when he has been the sole reason for India's wins, but he has never been the sole reason for India's losses. It's best to leave it to him to deal with what is in front of him now, because no one else has been in his position. No one else has played 192 Tests, made 34,000 runs or scored 100 centuries. Let's not jump the gun, let's give the man the respect he deserves," Kumble wrote in his column for the Week magazine. "For 23 years, he has helped people dream, he has made them feel better emotionally. More the reason why we need to give him his emotional space now," he wrote. "...This is the time for him to be left alone. He is such a great player that he doesn't need anyone else's advice on how to score runs. He just needs people to back off and allow him to work out what he needs to return to run-scoring ways, which I am confident he will," he added. Kumble said that it's not only Tendulkar who is going through a bad phase but the whole Test team and implying that team is doing bad because of Tendulkar's poor form would be highly unfair. "For the first time, people are questioning his place in the team. The expectations are that he should retire because his performances over the last year or so haven't matched the standards he has set over the previous 22 years. Yes, we have not seen the best of Sachin in this phase, but it is not just him alone. If you look at the overall picture, the team has struggled in Test cricket. So are we suggesting that India are still a one-man army, still totally dependent on Sachin? I think not," he said. 

Sachin Tendulkar - God Of Cricket


Sachin Tendulkar - God Of Cricket
Sachin Tendulkar is the greatest ever One Day International player, one of the greatest Test Cricket player and Sachin Tendulkar stats proves this. In so many years of Sachin Tendulkar career, he has seen lots of ups and downs, achieved a lot in his career; Sachin statistics has never dropped and is right up there, among the best.



Sachin Tendulkar career started against arch rivals Pakistan , in the year 1989 at Faisalabad , Pakistan . He was just a 16 year kid, shivering due to cold waves of January, was facing fearsome trio of Wasim Akram, Imaran Khan and Waqar Younis. The 16 year old kid got out cheaply in the first innings and wasn’t comfortable even in the second; but what happened in 20 years after that match is history and world knows about it.

Since then, Sachin Tendulkar career has come a long way, Sachin Tendulkar stats have virtually become untouchable. Sachin statistics has gone to such a height where it will be a Herculean task for any and every batsman to achieve the same.

Sachin Tendulkar breaks ODI world record, hits first ever 200

Sachin Tendulkar became the first man ever to score double hundred in one-dayers. The former India captain reached the landmark with a single off Charl Langeveldt in the final over. India won the match by 153 runs to take a winning 2-0 lead in the series after bowling out the tourists for 248.

Sachin Tendulkar


Sachin Tendulkar



Regarded as one of the greatest batsmen ever, Sachin Ramesh Tendulkar is the mainstay of Indian batting line-up for more than two decades. He is the world's leading run-scorer in both Test (14,692) and ODI (18,111) cricket. In 2011, Tendulkar finally achieved his dream of winning the Cricket World Cup at the Wankhede stadium in Mumbai. It took six World Cup appearances for the 'Little Master' to win the coveted trophy. Tendulkar is the leading century maker in both Test and ODI and has so far scored 99 (51 Test + 48 ODI) international centuries. He also has played highest number of Test and ODI matches. Among many laurels he had won - the most prominent ones are: Padma Vibhushan, India's second highest civilian award, and Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna, India's highest sporting honour. Surprisingly after playing for more two decades, Tendulkar won his first ICC cricketer of the year award in 2010. Tendulkar described ‘2010’ as among the best ever in his cricketing career. In February 2010, he became the first batsman to break the 200-run barrier in the one-day cricket. Tendulkar made his Test debut as a 16-year-old against Pakistan at Karachi in November 1989. He then played his first one-day match against the same team in the next month.

Full name Sachin Ramesh Tendulkar
Born April 24, 1973, Bombay (now Mumbai), Maharashtra
Current age 39 years 222 days
Major teams India, Asia XI, Mumbai, Mumbai Indians,Yorkshire
Nickname Tendlya, Little Master
Playing role Top-order batsman
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm offbreak, Legbreak googly
Height 5 ft 5 in
Education Sharadashram Vidyamandir School
In a nutshell Perhaps the most complete batsman and the most worshipped cricketer in the world, Tendulkar holds just about every batting record worth owning in the game, including those for most runs and hundreds in Tests and ODIs, and most international runs. More
Sachin Ramesh Tendulkar
Batting and fielding averages
MatInnsNORunsHSAveBFSR100504s6sCtSt
Tests1923173215562248*54.605165671140
ODIs4634524118426200*44.832136786.23499620161951400
T20Is110101010.001283.33002010
First-class2974714824618248*58.19791111840
List A5515385521999200*45.54601141750
Twenty207777102440100*36.412008121.5111531331240
Bowling averages
MatInnsBallsRunsWktsBBIBBMAveEconSR4w5w10
Tests19214141862459453/103/1454.643.5293.0000
ODIs463270805468501545/325/3244.485.1052.2420
T20Is11151211/121/1212.004.8015.0000
First-class29775514351703/1062.153.45107.800
List A5511023084782015/325/3242.174.9750.8420
Twenty207789312321/121/1261.507.9346.5000
Career statistics
Test debutPakistan v India at Karachi, Nov 15-20, 1989 scorecard
Last TestIndia v England at Mumbai, Nov 23-26, 2012 scorecard
Test statistics
ODI debutPakistan v India at Gujranwala, Dec 18, 1989 scorecard
Last ODIIndia v Pakistan at Dhaka, Mar 18, 2012 scorecard
ODI statistics
Only T20ISouth Africa v India at Johannesburg, Dec 1, 2006 scorecard
T20I statistics
First-class debut1988/89
Last First-classIndia v England at Mumbai, Nov 23-26, 2012 scorecard
List A debut1989/90
Last List AIndia v Pakistan at Dhaka, Mar 18, 2012 scorecard
Twenty20 debutSouth Africa v India at Johannesburg, Dec 1, 2006 scorecard
Last Twenty20Mumbai Indians v Sydney Sixers at Durban, Oct 22, 2012 scorecard
Recent matches
Bat & BowlTeamOppositionGroundMatch DateScorecard
8, 8Indiav EnglandMumbai23 Nov 2012Test # 2062
13, 0/8Indiav EnglandAhmedabad15 Nov 2012Test # 2058
137Mumbaiv RailwaysMumbai2 Nov 2012FC
22Mum Indiansv Syd SixersDurban22 Oct 2012T20
2Mum Indiansv Super KingsJohannesburg20 Oct 2012T20
7Mum Indiansv YorkshireCape Town18 Oct 2012T20
16Mum Indiansv LionsJohannesburg14 Oct 2012T20
5Mum Indiansv ScorchersJohannesburg12 Oct 2012Other T20
17, 27Indiav New ZealandBangalore31 Aug 2012Test # 2055
19, 0/6Indiav New ZealandHyderabad (Deccan)23 Aug 2012Test # 2054
Profile
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.
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Sachin Tendulkar


Sachin Tendulkar

Till this afternoon, two records still eluded Sachin Tendulkar — he wasn’t credited with the highest individual score either in Tests or in ODIs.
Odd, but true.
By evening, one had become his and this seeped-in-history city actually entered the record books for a non-martial achievement.
Sachin didn’t surprise by becoming the first to smash the 200-run barrier in ODIs. The surprise, if any, is that it took him so long (442 matches).
Now, a thing of the past is Zimbabwean Charles Coventry’s 194 not out, at home against Bangladesh last August, and Pakistani Saeed Anwar’s 194, versus India at a humid Chepauk, in the summer of 1997.
The record which has to be rewritten is Brian Lara’s 400 not out in Tests, set six years ago. Sachin may not talk about it, but deep within, it would definitely be a target.
One bar, then, remains to be raised.
For now, we can raise a toast to Sachin’s classic 200 not out (off only 147 balls, 25x4, 3x6) at the Captain Roop Singh Stadium, crafted in the presence of around 25,000 extremely passionate fans.
“I’ve been privileged to witness one of cricket’s great moments.... Frankly, I can’t think of how best to describe Sachin’s innings.... It was awesome.... His hunger for runs is quite unbelievable,” Darryl Cullinan, among South Africa’s finest batsmen, told The Telegraph.
Cullinan perfectly capsuled a sentiment which went well beyond the Gwalior fort.
Former India captain Ravi Shastri saluted Sachin in one word — “brilliant”.
Was there a shot Sachin didn’t play? Even if there was, nobody missed it in the midst of mind-blowing domination.
The man of the moment (and the match), Sachin, dedicated his record to “every Indian” and hoped that a compatriot would do better.
Exactly two months away from his 37th birthday, Sachin paced his innings so remarkably that it would attract the envy of 17-year-olds with big dreams.
The second hundred, in fact, was reached in 57 balls as opposed to the 90 required for the first.
Clearly, Sachin’s energy levels, too, are phenomenal. He ran 56 singles and 13 twos and, had the quota of overs not finished, would have continued shuttling between the 22 yards.
He did go off the field, after the fall of the third wicket, but that was understandable.
As has become customary after every achievement, Sachin looked at the heavens, remembered his father and thanked God. After the 200th run, the gaze upwards was longer than usual.
Well, a special allowance for a special moment.
By then, India was thanking Sachin and South Africa’s regular captain, Graeme Smith, must have thanked the Almighty for sparing him the Sachin-stick.
With Smith back home, deputy Jacques Kallis had to face the music. He didn’t enjoy it, but one Sachin Dev Burman, the inspiration behind Little Master II’s name, surely would have.
In a gesture which wasn’t missed, just about every South African congratulated Sachin as he walked off (in captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni’s company), having helped India set an almost impossible to achieve target of 402.
Confidence in tatters, the visitors fell far short (the hosts won by 153 runs) and lost the series, reducing the third and final ODI, in Motera, to largely academic interest.
Getting back to Sachin, after 20 years in the business, international cricket’s senior-most pro