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Thread: Sir Sachin Tendulkar 4

  1. #3021
    Senior Member Platinum Hubber ajithfederer's Avatar
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    I am not sure how many of us have noticed but Ian Chappell has been picking the best centuries he has watched. I never thought he would pick any one of Sachin's 100's. But he has picked Tendulkar's 114.

    Sachin Tendulkar, 114 v Australia, WACA, 1992
    'Incredible for an 18-year-old'

    August 21, 2012
    Sachin Tendulkar
    114 v Australia, WACA, 1992


    Sachin Tendulkar: no trouble making the adjustment from low to high bounce © Getty Images
    The first chance I actually got to see Sachin Tendulkar bat live was in the 1991-92 series, when India came to Australia. India finished up losing the series 4-0, but Tendulkar left a large impression on me.

    Firstly, he got the 148 in Sydney. That was a magnificent innings. The guy was only 18 years of age, and when you think of the contrasting pitches, coming from India, where the bounce is much lower, to Australia, where the bounce is much higher - that, to me, is one of the toughest adjustments you've got to make as a batsman. To me it's always much easier to adjust from the higher bounce to the lower bounce. Going the other way must be an enormous adjustment, and fortunately I never had to do it. And to do it as an 18-year-old kid, I thought was incredible. So I was highly impressed with Tendulkar when he got 148 in Sydney.

    He went to Perth, and I thought this would be really interesting, being a short player. There is no other like that - it's unique, the WACA pitch, with its bounce, particularly at that stage. It has come down a little bit since then but in those days it used to bounce a lot.



    I have seen Australian players who played Sheffield Shield cricket play a few innings at the WACA. It usually takes them a few innings to adjust to the WACA if they are not from Western Australia. Here is this 18-year-old kid, he comes to Perth and he makes 114. Okay, he got more runs in Sydney, but to me the innings in Perth was more impressive because here is a kid, coming from low-bouncing pitches to the highest bouncing and the fastest pitch in the world - totally unique conditions. He makes all the adjustments and scores 114.

    He was such a good player off the back foot. The shot that always stands out for me with Tendulkar is when he goes on the back foot and just punches down the ground. There is no follow-through with it. Boom! Just a punch. His timing was so good, and he used that shot a lot in Perth. It's not the easiest shot in the world to play on the normal-bouncing pitches, but on the extra bounce of Perth, for a short guy… it's a very, very tough shot to play.

    As I say, I was impressed with Tendulkar after I saw the 148 in Sydney, but boy, I was even more impressed when he got that 114 in Perth. That was a remarkable knock for a player of great experience, but for an 18-year-old, it was incredible.

    http://www.espncricinfo.com/ci/conte...io/577206.html

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  3. #3022
    Senior Member Platinum Hubber ajithfederer's Avatar
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    LM, Do we have this docu???

  4. #3023
    Moderator Diamond Hubber littlemaster1982's Avatar
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    ^^ I don't think so. Will DL.

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  7. #3026
    Senior Member Platinum Hubber ajithfederer's Avatar
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    A very rare video. Sir Viv . The man must like Tendulkar absolutely/



    Sir Viv Richards speaks of Sachin Tendulkar

  8. #3027
    Senior Member Platinum Hubber ajithfederer's Avatar
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    Sachin Tendulkar 76 vs West Indies 1st Test 2011 HD

  9. #3028
    Senior Member Platinum Hubber ajithfederer's Avatar
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    BANGALORE, August 30, 2012
    ‘As long as I am enjoying it, I will play’

    K. C. VIJAYA KUMAR



    Way back in 1989, when Twitter was just a sound associated with birds, a 16-year-old tackled Imran Khan, Wasim Akram and Waqar Younis in Pakistan and emerged with his nascent reputation further enhanced.

    Cut to the present, nothing has changed for Indian cricket’s seemingly eternal man. The hunger to succeed remains undiminished and this trait was reiterated by Sachin Tendulkar in a chat here with The Hindu ahead of Wednesday’s Castrol Cricketing Excellence awards function.

    The maestro looked back at last season’s mixed results, stressed that he is one with the young lads, had words of wisdom for Unmukt Chand and also hoped that the young crop would step into the huge shoes of Rahul Dravid and V.V.S. Laxman.

    Excerpts:

    Part I: The Tendulkar files

    That significant hundred: After I scored my 99th hundred against South Africa at Nagpur, nobody spoke about my 100th hundred because the focus was on the World Cup. After the World Cup, everyone thought ‘what next’ and that’s how the focus shifted to my 100. I came close to scoring it in England, scored a 94 against the West Indies and I was moving well in Australia. If I have to look at the 2011 season, it started well with a hundred at Cape Town and ended well (at Dhaka), though there were unlucky patches.

    Staying fit all these years: Without the help of doctors, physios, trainers, friends, teammates and family members, things would not have been the same because when you get injured you feel deflated.

    My tennis elbow kept me out for four months and I could not even hit a plastic ball with a plastic bat. I was really worried. For any sportsman, the toughest task is being patient and waiting for your injury to heal. Luckily, my wife is a doctor and that helped.

    Serious senior? Not always…: I am an easy-going person. I am not serious all the time. I play pranks and it is not one-way traffic, they (the youngsters in the team) can do the same to me.

    A team is a family and only if you are like that can it help make them feel at ease when they are playing.”

    The journey will continue: As long as I am enjoying myself, as long as I can contribute, I will play.

    I have always cared about my cricket, have always valued whatever has come my way and I have not taken anything for granted.

    It’s about how you prepare yourself before a series, a tournament or any match.

    Part II: The team

    Transition blues: No one can become a Dravid or a Laxman overnight. It is going to require a number of hours of training.

    Forget the hours they spent playing Tests or ODI cricket, also factor in the number of hours they spent training. Whatever the records or statistics you get to see did not happen just like that.

    They worked hard for that. If the younger generation gets to play for India and if it is your passion, then you got to push your body and mind to any extent.

    Last season’s vagaries: It started off well and in the Cape Town Test (against South Africa), we were on top throughout the match except in the last few overs and then we knew that we had to play for a draw. After that, the World Cup was a fabulous journey. England though was a tough series and we were badly hit by injuries. Then, we had a good home series against the West Indies.

    And in Australia, I thought we were in the driver’s seat (in the first Test at Melbourne) and it slipped away for us.

    On the second day, I had a wonderful partnership with Rahul and we were 200 plus for two and then, I got out in the last over and Rahul got out in the first over on the third morning. That was the turning point.

    Dravid’s high in England: He was in the zone. His concentration was spot on. There were some tough times and he overcame those obstacles brilliantly.

    Ashwin’s growth: He has consistently done well, not just in bowling but also in batting. He has scored a Test hundred and has had some key partnerships and it is wonderful.

    Yuvraj and swirling emotions: I met Yuvraj in England in June. It was tough for me to not get emotional. I had sort of decided that I would not get that emotional in front of him because he was the one who had gone through terrible times. We went out for dinner and it was fun.

    He had done everything possible that his doctors advised him to do and there is a clear cut message to all cancer patients that they can be cured.

    Unmukt and the road ahead: Unmukt has proved himself right now, but this is the beginning of a journey. Before the under-19 team left to Australia, I spent an hour with them in Mumbai.

    Without collective effort, success can’t be gained and there were many moments when others contributed and at the big moment, Unmukt batted brilliantly.

    I told them that they should spend as much time as they can with each other because it is going to be a tough journey.

    http://www.thehindu.com/sport/cricke...?homepage=true

  10. #3029
    Senior Member Diamond Hubber selvakumar's Avatar
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    Feddy, Thanks for sharing that Sir Viv Richard's speech. You can see what he feels from his eyes. I never knew he admired Sachin this much. While people from other countries put down Sachin to project their own stars at every given opportunity, here is a man who admires Sachin even though he has another icon (Lara) from his own country. Actually, I was quite moved after seeing that video.

  11. #3030
    Senior Member Veteran Hubber wizzy's Avatar
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    here is a man who admires Sachin even though he has another icon (Lara) from his own country. Actually, I was quite moved after seeing that video.
    Island rivalry goes a long way..Viv actually delayed Lara's debut whilst he was the skipper and when he was a chief selector he publicly criticized Lara for lack of passion/motivation and asked him to watch videos of his era for inspiration
    Gaana Kalaadhara Gandharva Gaana Lola Kaliyuga Gaana Thilaga
    Nadha Brahma Kochchappa Brother Seshappa

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