Some days back, when the cricketing legend, and perhaps the
"Most Looked At" and Celebrated individual of independent India,
decided to hang his boots from the limited overs format of cricket, here are
certain unique facts and figures about the Master Blaster to pay him a tribute.
However, Sachin and Records are now nothing but synonyms, surely
if it is about runs and centuries, averages and boundaries, cricketing spirit
and awards, the outcome would be obvious and expected. Therefore, here’s some
research over the longevity of the Little Master.
Ever since the maestro debuted on 15 Nov 1989, the following has changed apart from cricket in India. This analysis is simply to derive the longevity of the athlete and also to recognise the pain and effort the legend has indulged in to represent (and make proud) the tricolour.
Ever since the maestro debuted on 15 Nov 1989, the following has changed apart from cricket in India. This analysis is simply to derive the longevity of the athlete and also to recognise the pain and effort the legend has indulged in to represent (and make proud) the tricolour.
- India's GDP has grown by 453% since Sachin faced the first ball against Pakistan in Karachi 23 years back
- 41 crore new Indians have been born during Sachin's long career, taking the country's population to 126 crore, a whopping 48% increase.
- We were struggling as a nation when he came to power (yes, cricket has became a power in India). Our foreign reserves were at 5.83 billion dollars, Now at 280 billion dollars (become 48 times).
- Sensex has reached from 1050 to 18600
- Sachin was the 74th Indian to wear the ODI cap. Now we have 275, added 200 during his career. More than 70% of new additions have already retired.
- At World Cups he has been more prolific than anywhere else, his total tally at WCs (2278 Runs) is 30.6% greater than his closest and arch rival Ricky Ponting (1743 runs). And if you think he has played more, he has played 1 match less than Ponting in WCs. He has also hit 6 centuries and 21 Half tons.
- Sachin's runs in WCs are more than any other player's (Ok we all know that), but what's more exciting is that his runs scored in WCs is greater than runs scored by as many as 8 test playing teams.
Paddy
Upton, former mental
conditioning coach and Gary Kirsten’s assistant coach who has seen
Sachin up close during his stint where India won World Cup recently writes
after Sachin announces his retirement from the One dayers as below:
“It was on the Proteas team bus
that I read about Sachin Tendulkar’s retirement from ODI cricket. I found
myself reflecting on my three years of working with him. To me, the opportunity
was a privilege. So I thought I’d share some of my reflection here.
When I addressed the Indian
cricket team for the first time (in 2008), I started by explaining that I did
not see them as ‘cricketers’, but as human beings, each with many facets. Being
a talented cricketer is only a part of who they are. They may also be someone’s
brother, son, friend, parent or partner, and each is a unique emotional,
intellectual and spiritual being. I reminded them that they were born with
their talent; call it God-given, which is not an achievement but a blessing.
The achievement comes when they tirelessly study, train and practice to develop
that talent.
During 2008-2011 I watched
Sachin epitomize developing a talent. He paid more attention to and invested
more time into practicing his batting than any other player. He never once cut
a corner in his preparation for a game, making sure he attended to every
detail. After nearly two decades in the
international game he had earned the right stay at the hotel and rest while
some of his teammates attended our trademark ‘optional’ practices. Yet he never
did. Not a week went by where any player, youngsters included, hit more balls
in practice. Add this attention to detail and impeccable work ethic to his
extraordinary God-given talent, and it doesn’t take much to figure out why he
is so successful.
As mentioned, being an
outstanding cricketer is a part, but not all, of the man.
When someone becomes a top class
athlete, it does not mean they automatically become a special human. Each one
starts out as an ordinary person who happens to be blessed with an extraordinary
talent. To become a special person requires that they intentionally develop and
mature themselves as a person just as they would work on mastering their
profession.
It is fairly common that a
cricketer (or any sportsmen, businessmen, politician) who achieves success is
lured into falsely viewing himself as a special person, believing he is more
important than others by virtue of the fact he can hit a cricket ball more
sweetly, and because others may treat him as more special. In India, the amount
of adulation, admiration and hero-worship that is lavished on national
cricketers poses a huge challenge to their humility. None have been
hero-worshipped and admired as Sachin Ramesh Tendulkar. He is more worshipped
than some of the Hindu Gods. A priest at an ODI once brandished a banner
saying, “Sorry God, but I love Sachin more than you.”
With his unassailable statistics
and virtual deification, Sachin has earned the right to believe and act like he
is special. But he does not. And it is this characteristic that impressed me at
least as much as the Little Master’s statistics, milestones and awe-inspiring
performances.
Despite his God-like status, in
a country that sometimes overvalues power and status, Sachin exudes a humble,
feet-on-the-ground approach. Early in my tenure with the team and during a
one-on-one session with him, he spoke of a mantra that he lives by and that his
father had passed to him as a young man. He granted me permission to share it.
He told me that, “who I am as a
person, my nature is permanent, my results on the field are temporary – they
will go up and go down. It is more important that I am consistent as a person,
this I can control, my results I cannot”. He added that, “people will criticise
me for my results, and will soon forget them, but they will always remember the
impact I have on them as a person. This will last forever.”
And so the most mobbed,
harassed, pestered and interrupted person in India, rather than expecting
kingly treatment from others, is constantly mindful of treating others well and
respectfully. During one tour I was entering a hotel elevator with Sachin to
depart for a match. A very nervous mom asked if she could take a picture of him
with her two young children. We risked being late for the bus, but Sachin obliged,
letting the elevator go without him. The nervous mom was shaking so much she
couldn’t get the camera to work. I was about to help Sachin out by rushing him
along, when he turned to me and said, ‘Pads won’t you help her with the camera,
help her to get a nice picture.’ Most who know him have an abundance of similar
stories.
He shares his professionalism
and teaches respect. During a net practice, a young Ishant Sharma kicked the
ball in frustration after a poorly executed delivery. Sachin calmly went over,
picked the ball up and returned it to Ishant, telling him in gentle manner, “it
is because of this ball that you have what you have got in life, without this
ball you have nothing. Treat it with the respect it is due.”
Fast forward to a meeting during
India’s triumphant 2011 ICC World Cup campaign. We’re discussing cricket and
life, and some of the senior players are asked to share the most significant
event in their careers. Sachin’s significant event left me with a lump in my
throat.
It happened soon after he was
selected to play for India as a 16-year-old, and had returned to his Ranji
Trophy team. A 16 year-old friend and teammate approached him and said ‘I speak
on behalf of your friends. We know that you are a better cricketer than us, but
since you were selected to play for India, you have been acting as if you are a
better person than us. We don’t think it is a good thing for you to do.” Sachin
marked this comment as one of the most significant events of his career,
helping him to realize at a very young age that being a good cricketer did not
mean he was a special person. He continues to live this lesson. As a veteran of
over 22 years of international cricket, he treats junior teammates as fellow
men, including them in conversations, showing an interest in their well-being,
asking them questions and helping them with their game.
When someone with an
extraordinary God-given talent adds to it an incredibly professional, detailed
and tirelessly high work ethic, brilliance arises. The world has known just one
Einstein, Mozart, van Gogh, Michael Jackson and Tendulkar. When someone with
brilliance adds strength of character, humility, respectfulness to being an
all-round good person, then the world is blessed with not just sporting
greatness, but true greatness. Arise Sachin Tendulkar.”
Here are a few very popular and noteworthy quotes about him:
I am one of those fortunate people who have seen Bradman and
Tendulkar bat in my lifetime and in my opinion Tendulkar is the best batsman I
have seen in my life - Hanif
Mohammed
Technically, you can't fault Sachin. Seam or spin, fast or slow
nothing is a problem - Geoff
Boycott
You get him out and half the battle is won - Arjuna Ranatunga
He is a tremendous cricketer. He is young and has got a lot of
ability. He's got his own style. He has got the temperament for big cricket and
I hope that he goes from strength to strength - Clive Lloyd
I had to remind Gary Kristen often that he was in the covers to
field against Sachin not to applaud him - Hansie Cronje
I have seen GOD, he bats at no.4 for India in Tests - Mathew Hayden
When you bowl at him you are not just trying to get him out, you
are trying to impress him - Andrew
Flintoff
Sachin is a genius. I'm a mere mortal - Brian Charles Lara
I am fortunate that I've to bowl at him only in the nets - Anil Kumble
India me aap Prime Minister ko ek Baar Katghare me khada kar
sakte hain..Par Sachin Tendulkar par Ungli nahi utha Sakte - Navjot Singh Sidhu
He can play that leg glance with a walking stick also - Waqar Younis
Sachin Tendulkar has often reminded me of a veteran army colonel
who has many medals on his chest to show how he has conquered bowlers all over
the world - Allan
Donald
There are 2 kinds of batsmen in the world. One Sachin Tendulkar.
Two all the others - Andy
Flower
If Sachin plays well...India sleeps well - Harsha Bhogle
I would go to bed having nightmares of Sachin dancing down the
ground and hitting me for sixes - Shane
Warne
Beneath the helmet, under that
unruly curly hair, inside the cranium, there is something we don't know,
something beyond scientific measure. Something that allows him to soar, to roam
a territory of sport that, forget us, even those who are gifted enough to play
alongside him cannot even fathom. When he goes out to bat, people switch on
their TV sets and switch off their lives - British
Broadcasting Corporation
The number of innings of his
(Tendulkar's) I have been able to sit back and watch, I think he is an amazing
player. Look at his stats and records and it's quite incredible for someone to
have stayed in the game for 20 years.. He has set benchmarks for guys like me
to chase him and get as close as we can. If I had to last 20 years, I would
probably be batting in a wheelchair - Ricky
Ponting
The joy he brings to the
millions of his countrymen, the grace with which he handles all the adulation and
the expectations and his innate humility - all make for a one-in-a-billion
individual - Glen McGrath
Test cricket is bloody hard
work, especially when you've got Sachin batting with what looks like a three
metre wide bat - Michael Hussey
Viv
Richards could terrorise an attack with pitiless brutality, Lara could dissect
bowlers with surgical and Magical strokes, Tendulkar can take an attack apart
with towering simplicity. From the start he had an uncanny way of executing his
strokes perfectly. Tendulkar was born to bat - Peter
Roebuck
I would like to thank you from
the bottom of my heart for allowing us to breathe the same air as you do - Shah Rukh Khan
I'll see god when I die but
till then I'll see Sachin - A Banner during a match in Sharjah
Commit all your sins when
Sachin is batting. They will go unnoticed because even the lord is watching - A
Banner in one of the matches in Sydney
Sachin’s
Statistics:
Full name Sachin Ramesh Tendulkar
Born April 24, 1973, Bombay (now Mumbai), Maharashtra
Current age 39 years 248 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.
Mat
|
Inns
|
NO
|
Runs
|
HS
|
Ave
|
BF
|
SR
|
100
|
50
|
4s
|
6s
|
Ct
|
St
|
|
Tests
|
194
|
320
|
32
|
15645
|
248*
|
54.32
|
51
|
66
|
67
|
114
|
0
|
|||
ODIs
|
463
|
452
|
41
|
18426
|
200*
|
44.83
|
21367
|
86.23
|
49
|
96
|
2016
|
195
|
140
|
0
|
T20Is
|
1
|
1
|
0
|
10
|
10
|
10.00
|
12
|
83.33
|
0
|
0
|
2
|
0
|
1
|
0
|
First-class
|
299
|
474
|
48
|
24701
|
248*
|
57.98
|
79
|
112
|
184
|
0
|
||||
List A
|
551
|
538
|
55
|
21999
|
200*
|
45.54
|
60
|
114
|
175
|
0
|
||||
Twenty20
|
77
|
77
|
10
|
2440
|
100*
|
36.41
|
2008
|
121.51
|
1
|
15
|
313
|
31
|
24
|
0
|
Mat
|
Inns
|
Balls
|
Runs
|
Wkts
|
BBI
|
BBM
|
Ave
|
Econ
|
SR
|
4w
|
5w
|
10
|
|
Tests
|
194
|
141
|
4186
|
2459
|
45
|
3/10
|
3/14
|
54.64
|
3.52
|
93.0
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
ODIs
|
463
|
270
|
8054
|
6850
|
154
|
5/32
|
5/32
|
44.48
|
5.10
|
52.2
|
4
|
2
|
0
|
T20Is
|
1
|
1
|
15
|
12
|
1
|
1/12
|
1/12
|
12.00
|
4.80
|
15.0
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
First-class
|
299
|
7551
|
4351
|
70
|
3/10
|
62.15
|
3.45
|
107.8
|
0
|
0
|
|||
List A
|
551
|
10230
|
8478
|
201
|
5/32
|
5/32
|
42.17
|
4.97
|
50.8
|
4
|
2
|
0
|
|
Twenty20
|
77
|
8
|
93
|
123
|
2
|
1/12
|
1/12
|
61.50
|
7.93
|
46.5
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
In the End, I can only say that his contributions to the sport
has been something that the whole nation and the world will look up to and the
little master will inspire the generations to come.
Thank you so much for giving all Indians and people all over the world a reason to watch Cricket. Sachin might be a chapter in the history of Test cricket with other legends but Sachin himself is the History of ODIs.