-
17th October 2008, 09:08 PM
#1
Senior Member
Veteran Hubber
-
17th October 2008 09:08 PM
# ADS
Circuit advertisement
-
17th October 2008, 09:10 PM
#2
Senior Member
Veteran Hubber
Tendulkar scales the highest peak
S Rajesh
Thirty-nine centuries, 11,954 runs, 152 Tests - the numbers are immense whichever way you look at it. In a career spanning nearly 20 years, Sachin Tendulkar has constantly been India's biggest hope: through the 1990s, he was easily India's best batsman, especially overseas, in conditions which none of the others came close to mastering. With the emergence of Rahul Dravid, VVS Laxman, Virender Sehwag and Sourav Ganguly, the pressure has eased somewhat, but Tendulkar still remains the most prized wicket for opposition bowlers, which is a remarkable testimony to his skill levels and the high standards he has consistently achieved.
The best measure of the class of a batsman is his performances against the greatest team of his time, and if that is the yardstick then Tendulkar is matchless: in 25 Tests against Australia, he averages 56, with nine hundreds and an equal number of fifties. Since 1990, he is one of only four batsmen who have scored more than 1000 runs against Australia at a 50-plus average. (Click here for the full list.)
Through most of his career, Tendulkar has been the mainstay of the Indian batting, which is reflected in the percentage of team runs that he has scored. As you'd expect, it isn't as high as Lara's, who has often been West Indies' only hope, but it's only a few decimal points below Dravid's, and a run lesser than Gavaskar's, who was also helped by the fact that he opened the batting and hence had a greater opportunity to bat. The three Australians are at the bottom of the list, which clearly indicates the quality of the other batsmen they played with.
http://content-usa.cricinfo.com/ci/c...ry/363717.html
-
17th October 2008, 09:11 PM
#3
Senior Member
Veteran Hubber
-
17th October 2008, 09:11 PM
#4
Senior Member
Veteran Hubber
-
17th October 2008, 09:11 PM
#5
Senior Member
Veteran Hubber
Tendulkar becomes the leading Test run-scorer
Journey to the top
-
17th October 2008, 09:12 PM
#6
Senior Member
Veteran Hubber
Kumble, Ganguly, Dravid hail Tendulkar`s feat as phenomenal
Mohali, Oct 17: Test skipper Anil Kumble and senior players Rahul Dravid and Sourav Ganguly today hailed Sachin Tendulkar as a "phenomenal player" after the master batsman became Test cricket's highest run-getter.
"It is a great effort for him and a great honour for all of us. It is a great moment for Indian cricket and I am happy that I have seen most of these 12,000 runs being scored by him from the dressing room," Kumble said while congratulating Tendulkar on his historic feat.
Ganguly, who will retire from the game after the four-match Test series against Australia, was fulsome on his praise of Tendulkar with whom he shared the dressing room for the last 13 years.
"It is a fantastic achievement, kudos to him. He is a phenomenal player. It has been a great honour to share dressing room with him for the last 13 years," Ganguly said.
Dravid hailed Tendulkar as a "great champion" who truly deserved the feat.
"It is a phenomenal achievement. He is a great champion and his achievement is truly well deserved," Dravid said.
-
17th October 2008, 11:49 PM
#7
Senior Member
Diamond Hubber
http://www.ziddu.com/viewfile/242380...n.mpg.FLV.html
Sachin's interview to Ravi Shastri after the end of the first days play - for the unlucky, condemned souls like me who could not catch that live.
-
17th October 2008, 11:54 PM
#8
Senior Member
Diamond Hubber
And WTH is wrong with Mohali people. The stadium was just 50% full on a day in which history was re-written by one of the greatest sportspersons India has ever seen
-
18th October 2008, 01:03 AM
#9
Moderator
Diamond Hubber
To the Boss
Times change and yet it doesn’t.
Nineteen years, hundreds of crores wealth, and all sorts of records later, the entire world is still waiting for that one big scandal which can fill your face with cow dung, one big dissent on the cricket field which can be broadcasted the world over to embarrass, one wrong statement to the press in anger. You keep them waiting as always. Don’t let them win.
In all these years, your arms has seen more tennis elbows than you might want, you are not the tormentor you were, but your legs and your running between the wickets is still intact. You still score almost just as quickly.
Prime Ministers have come and gone but your batting average and strike rate has been the same. How I wish we had such constant GDP numbers. India has seen many a hard hitters, many a technically correct folks. You were the only one who can consistently hit hard while being technically correct. Two decades and that has not changed an iota.
Pontings may come and go, but if I were to choose between watching a gorgeous woman in nude or your trademark straight drive in full flow, I will choose your straight drive. That won’t change any soon.
During your early twenties they said you are throwing away your wicket, then in your late twenties they said you are not attacking enough, then you were discovered as selfish, now you are seen as that old guy. Indians wanted you and India win every single match. But all along the problem was always with you. You made such expectations look realistic. In the nineties, you made us forget that the game is played by eleven folks, with bat and ball. The entire country switched off the TV and went back to work once you got out.
First it was the Pakistanis, nowadays your own countrymen want you to go. Yet Shane Warne sings your praise as always. He should know since you had given him more sleepless nights than his own wife.
Retire you will one day. Your records will be broken as all records will be. You will die like all humans one day. But the master class you have given us on how a young middle-class guy should handle fame, wealth, adulation, media pressure, world class opposition, and the hopes and anger of one billion people will remain etched in our memories for ever.
My only request to you. All is well that ends well. If push comes to shove, veto them by hanging up your boots. Your greatness is more important than a few thousand runs. Don’t let them win. I know you won’t.
-
18th October 2008, 01:52 AM
#10
Senior Member
Seasoned Hubber
Bookmarks