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AuthorTopic: Mumbai ka don kaun ? Sachin Sachin!!!!  (Read 3680 times)

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justforkix

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Re: Mumbai ka don kaun ? Sachin Sachin!!!!
« Reply #40 on: February 26, 2010, 03:29:02 AM »
lift off from Rajinikanth jokes ;)
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ramshorns

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Re: Mumbai ka don kaun ? Sachin Sachin!!!!
« Reply #41 on: February 26, 2010, 04:23:01 AM »
Silly.
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"Symonds is a great guy. Whatever happened in Sydney, that's all history now. We don't want to keep on thinking about what happened then. Hopefully, with his performance and mine, we can do a lot of good things for Mumbai Indians. "
Harbhajan Singh insists he has no problem playing with Symonds

vincent

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Re: Mumbai ka don kaun ? Sachin Sachin!!!!
« Reply #42 on: February 26, 2010, 09:29:27 AM »
Well, here are some quotes on Tendulkar:

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

"Nothing bad can happen to us if we're on a plane in India with Sachin Tendulkar on it."
- Hashim Amla, the South African batsman, reassures himself as he boards a flight.

"Sometimes you get so engrossed in watching batsmen like Rahul Dravid and Sachin Tendulkar that you lose focus on your job."
- Yaseer Hameed in pakistani newspaper.

"To Sachin, the man we all want to be"
- Andrew Symonds wrote on an aussie t-shirt he autographed specially for Sachin.

“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."
- BBC on Sachin

"Tuzhe pata hai tune kiska catch chhoda hai?"
- Wasim Akram to Abdul Razzaq when the latter dropped Sachin's catch in 2003 WC.

Sachin is a genius. I'm a mere mortal.
- Brian Charles Lara

"We did not lose to a team called India ...we lost to a man called Sachin."
- Mark Taylor, during the test match in Chennai (1997)

"The more I see of him the more confused I'm getting to which is his best knock."
- M. L. Jaisimha

"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

"I can be hundred per cent sure that Sachin will not play for a minute longer when he is not enjoying himself. He is still so eager to go out there and play. He will play as long as he feels he can play,"
- Anjali Tendulkar

Question: Who do you think as most important celebrity ?
Shah Rukh Khan: There was a big party where stars from bollywood and cricket were invited. Suddenly, there was a big noise, all wanted to see approaching Amitabh Bachhan. Then Sachin entered the hall and Amitabh was leading the queue to get a grab of the GENIUS!!
-  Shah Rukh Khan in an interview.

“ India me aap PrimeMinister ko ek Baar Katghare me khada kar sakte hain..Par Sachin Tendulkar par Ungli nahi utha Sakte.. “
- Navjot Singh Sidhu on TV

He can play that leg glance with a walking stick also.
- Waqar Younis

 Sachin Tendulkar has o ften 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. I was bowling to Sachin and he hit me for two fours in a row. One from point and the other in between point and gully. That was the last two balls of the over and the over after that we (SA) took a wicket and during the group meeting i told Jonty (Rhodes) to be alert and i know a way to pin Sachin. And i delivered the first ball of my next over and it was a fuller length delevery outside offstump. And i shouted catch. To my astonishment the ball was hit to the cover boundary. Such was the brilliance of Sachin. His reflex time is the best i have ever seen. Its like 1/20th of a sec. To get his wicket better not prepare. Atleast u wont regret if he hits you for boundaries.
- Allan Donald   

On a train from Shimla to Delhi , there was a halt in one of the stations. The train stopped by for few minutes a s usual. Sachin was nearing century, batting on 98. The passengers, railway officials, everyone on the train waited for Sachin to complete the century. This Genius can stop time in India !!
- Peter Rebouck - Aussie journalist

"Sachin cannot cheat. He is to cricket what (Mahatma) Gandhiji was to politics. It's clear discrimination. "
- NKP Salve, former Union Minister when Sachin was accused of ball tempering

There are 2 kind of batsmen in the world. One Sachin Tendulkar. Two all the others.
- Andy Flower

"I have seen god, he bats at no.4 for India "
- Mathew Hayden
 
"Commit all your sins when Sachin is batting. They will go unnoticed coz even the GOD is watching"
- A hoarding in England
 
"Even my father's name is Sachin Tendulkar."
- Tendulkar's daughter, Sara, tells her class her father's name after the teacher informs them of a restaurant of the same name in Mumbai.

 
 
 
 
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keep-it-cool

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Re: Mumbai ka don kaun ? Sachin Sachin!!!!
« Reply #43 on: February 26, 2010, 01:09:03 PM »
Heady stuff huh? My favorite one is: "Commit all your crimes when Tendulkar is batting. For even the Lord must be watching..."

Who said it?
The above in my post i think are quick compilation of quotes from cricket associated names.

http://blogs.cricinfo.com/surfer/

search "Ashu Mittal"


This is an old statement ..this Ashu Mittal seems to have picked it up. I have a compilation of quotes on SRT tht someone has compiled in video form on my facebook ....had put it on long back and shared it again two days back. Most of these are on there. A search on youtube should also throw the video up.
« Last Edit: February 26, 2010, 05:44:53 PM by kban1 »
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Sachin Tendulkar gave the muhurat clap for 'Awwal Number' - that apart, he hasn't done much wrong in the last 20 yrs!

kban1

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Re: Mumbai ka don kaun ? Sachin Sachin!!!!
« Reply #44 on: February 26, 2010, 05:43:37 PM »
Sachin was simply unstoppable: AB de Villiers

Ahmedabad, Fri, Feb 26 2010     
 
 
Sachin Tendulkar was unstoppable at Gwalior according to AB de Villiers.[© AFP]Two days after Sachin Tendulkar made history in Gwalior, South African batsman AB de Villiers said it was an "unbelievable" batting display and no bowler in the world could have stopped the iconic Indian.

Tendulkar became the first batsman in one day cricket's history to smash a double century in the match and his sublime unbeaten 200 off just 147 balls guided India to a series-clinching 153-run victory.

De Villiers, whose unbeaten 114 in the Gwalior match was reduced to a footnote, said Tendulkar was simply unstoppable.

"Sachin played an unbelievable knock...He didn't do much wrong in the last game. I don't think any bowler in the world could have tackled that," said de Villiers.

Over all, de Villiers said, bowling to Tendulkar and Virender Sehwag was a learning experience for the South African bowlers.

"When you are up against the likes of Sachin Tendulkar and Virender Sehwag, it puts a lot of pressure on you early on. The bowlers are quite young, so it is pretty tough for them coming out here and bowling to some of the best players in the world.

"I think the most important thing for our young bowlers is to learn and I think they did that. We had a nice team meeting yesterday and we discussed the game plan, where we went wrong and what we did right," he said.

India's back-to-back victories may have rendered tomorrow's tie inconsequential but de Villiers said the South Africans were desperate to prevent a whitewash.

"It's not really a dead game for us. We have got a lot of pride to win back. We really want to win the last one-day international. 2-1 sounds a lot better than 3-0. We really want to fight and prove a point that we are a good side," said de Villiers.

He said there was nothing wrong with South Africa and it was actually India who had raised their game to clinch the ODI series with one match to spare.

"Not much went wrong. We still tried our best. Everyone is still in good form. I just think the Indians raised the bar and are playing better cricket. We are lacking in a few areas," conceded the 26-year-old batsman.

De Villiers felt the younger players in his team had learnt a lot on the visit which should stand them in good stead for the 2011 World Cup.

"Obviously, it has been a great experience for a bunch of young guys. The youngsters have learnt a lot of lessons over here, including myself, I have learnt quite a bit," de Villiers said.

"The one-day series is a bit of a disappointment but as long as we learn from our mistakes, I cannot see us going wrong in the future. We got a few very talented young boys in the team and if they learn from their mistakes here in the sub-continent coming to the World Cup, I see a bright future for us," de Villiers predicted.

The elegant batsman said that it was all about confidence and momentum which at the moment the visitors were lacking while going into the final game of their tour.

"It obviously is a lot about confidence and momentum. Playing with confidence and momentum is pretty tough at the moment. So we want to finish on a high note out here, get some good memories behind us before we come back here for the World Cup," he said.

"We have got a lot of cricket before then, so we got lots of time to get some confidence behind us and build some nice spirit in the team. Like I said, the one-day team is pretty young. We will definitely get things right.

"(Coach) Corrie (van Zyl) and the management team have been working very hard, taking notes about where we went wrong. Most importantly, we would like to finish on a high tomorrow and show exactly what we are capable of," he elaborated.

The batsman said he had lot of good memories of this venue having done well not only in the Test on his last visit here but also in the Champions Trophy in 2006

http://www.cricbuzz.com/cricket-news/24389/sachin-was-simply-unstoppable-ab-de-villiers
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kban1

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Re: Mumbai ka don kaun ? Sachin Sachin!!!!
« Reply #45 on: February 26, 2010, 05:46:51 PM »
Tendulkar jumps to 3rd spot in ODI rankings

Dubai, Thu, Feb 25 2010     
 
 
Sachin Tendulkar jumped three places to third in the ICC ODI batsmen rankings after his record-breaking double-century against South Africa while India are almost assured of USD 75,000 for ending the calendar year at the number two position in the championship table.

Tendulkar (766 points), who returned undefeated on 200 in his 442nd ODI appearance, now trails second-placed Mike Hussey (809) of Australia by 43 points with Indian captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni (827) strengthening his position at the top of the rankings after hitting a 35-ball 68 not out against South Africa in the second ODI.

It is Tendulkar's highest ranking in two years after he had reached second position following an unbeaten 117 against Australia in Sydney.

While Tendulkar has vaulted into third position, fellow opener Virender Sehwag has dropped one place to 10th position.

After missing a few matches, Yuvraj Singh and Gautam Gambhir also slipped one and two places respectively to be at 13th and 21st. A player loses one per cent of his ratings points for every match missed.

In the bowlers list headed by New Zealand captain Daniel Vettori, Harbhajan Singh is the only Indian in the top 20 and the off-spinner retained his place at fifth.

In the Reliance Mobile ICC ODI Championship, India has all but cemented their second position after taking an unassailable 2-0 lead against South Africa. They are now on 123 ratings points while South Africa have slipped to 115 ratings points.

http://www.cricbuzz.com/cricket-news/24381/tendulkar-jumps-to-3rd-spot-in-odi-rankings
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kban1

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Re: Mumbai ka don kaun ? Sachin Sachin!!!!
« Reply #46 on: February 26, 2010, 05:48:26 PM »
Give him Bharat Ratna: Wadekar, Kapil, Vengsarkar

New Delhi, Fri, Feb 26 2010     
 
 
Sachin Tendulkar should be conferred the Bharat Ratna, feel former players.[© AFP]Describing Sachin Tendukar as the 'Kohinoor' of cricket, former captains Kapil Dev and Ajit Wadekar said he should be conferred the Bharat Ratna -- India's highest civilian award.

"Sachin is the Kohinoor diamond of the game of cricket. This cricketer has unmatched talent and you can't find another Tendulkar ever. I think, he should have got the Bharat Ratna," Wadekar told PTI Bhasha.

India's only World Cup winning captain, Kapil Dev, also supported Wadekar's view and said Tendulkar deserved the honour very much.

"Sachin has touched several milestones during his 20-year career in international cricket. He certainly deserves the Bharat Ratna. We will be very happy if he gets the highest honour of the country," Kapil said.

Kapil, though, said his views would be the same even if Tendulkar had not achieved the feat of scoring the first ODI double hundred.

"Even if Sachin would have got a duck in this innings, I would still say that he deserves the honour. No decision should be taken on the basis of a performance in one match, but I am keeping in mind his overall contribution," he said.

Another former captain and former selection committee chairman Dilip Vengsarkar echoed the same sentiment.

"If any player deserves the Bharat Ratna, it must be Tendulkar. He must get the award," he said.

Wadekar also hoped that Tendulkar would continue to play even after the 2011 World Cup, to be co-hosted by India Sri Lanka and Bangladesh.

"Sachin has proved with his fielding how fit still he is. I think, he can play for at least two more years after the World Cup next year."

Wadekar, who has also worked with Tendulkar as coach of the national team, supported the view of former England captain Nasser Hussain that Tendulkar was better than even Don Bradman, the iconic Australian batsman.

"I don't think any batsman can be better than Tendulkar, not even Bradman. Sachin has succeeded in all three forms of cricket -- Tests, one-dayers and Twenty20s," Wadekar said.

http://www.cricbuzz.com/cricket-news/24388/give-him-bharat-ratna-wadekar-kapil-vengsarkar
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kban1

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Re: Mumbai ka don kaun ? Sachin Sachin!!!!
« Reply #47 on: February 26, 2010, 05:54:45 PM »
Tendulkar's glory untouched by fame

Tendulkar has given an adoring nation everything it has asked for and still managed to keep his game and his ambitions pure

Harsha Bhogle

February 26, 2010

 
Sachin Tendulkar sugar-coated the recent reality of India and gave its people something to cheer about. It is not easy to possess the mandate to lift the spirits of such a large nation, but he has done that consistently. The comparison with Sir Donald Bradman is not restricted to his batting alone. Like the great man who brought cheer to post-war Australia, Tendulkar allowed India to momentarily forget fires and bombs and inflation and terrorist threats. It was like that with the century he made after England so graciously agreed to tour after the 26/11 attacks in Mumbai. It has been like that for a long time. For better or worse cricket is more than a sport in India; Tendulkar is more than just a cricketer. Where our elected representatives callously fritter away the mandate people give them, Tendulkar has stayed true to it.

And he has never forgotten why he started playing the game in the first place. The best have lofty ambitions when they begin but soon commerce, like a tenacious worm, gnaws into them. Fame surrounds them and prevents the fresh air of reason from breaking through. They acquire sycophants, that great curse of success. Playing the game becomes a means to a seemingly superior, but in reality hollower, end. Tendulkar has kept those demons at bay. He has made more money than anyone else in the game, acquired greater fame than is imaginable, but you could never guess that from the way he plays his cricket. He remains the servant, pursues the game with purity. Through the last decade India have been well-served by like-minded giants.

And he works as hard as anybody has. Lance Armstrong once said that he wins the Tour de France not when he is cycling down the Champs Elysees but when he is out in the mountains facing icy winds while others are cosying in their blankets for an extra hour. Two years ago Tendulkar realised that his future lay in the way his body coped; that eventually his body rather than a bowler would get him. During the first IPL, as he struggled with a groin injury, he admitted that he found continuous rehab very difficult to live with. Once fit, he was like the child again, able to do what he wanted without worrying about whether his body was accomplice or traitor. And so he trained harder and rested well. You could see the effect as he scampered between wickets. Tendulkar's delightful second wind is the result of what you and I have not seen: hours in the gym and in training.
 
 
As a result, Tendulkar's endgame is nowhere in sight. He is peeling off centuries like he did in his prime. The old air of predictability is still around; he is grinding his way through when needed, clobbering the ball when required. In this extraordinary long-distance race he is running, this looks like a mid-race burst rather than the finishing kick his age suggests it should be.

So why has no one else scored a double-century in limited-overs cricket so far? Well, because it is very difficult for a start. Assuming 300 balls, you should expect to get no more than 150, which means you need to bat at a strike-rate of 133. You need to be mentally alert, because one casual shot, one moment of disrespect, could be your undoing. But, let's admit, the combination of pitches, outfields and boundary ropes has rarely tilted the balance so much in the batsman's favour. In Gwalior the groundsman told one half of the class they were not wanted. The bowlers were the extras in a movie, seeking, at best, a talking part. The stage had been prepared for Tendulkar but he still had to deliver an unforgettable performance.

Inevitably the question will be asked: what next? I know there is only one thing he genuinely covets, and that is not in his hands. In 12 months Tendulkar hopes to play his sixth and last World Cup. So far his relationship with the World Cup has been like that of a child who scurries to the rossogulla shop only to find it shut every time. If he was a golfer seeking a Masters win or a tennis player hoping to win another Grand Slam, he could plan for it but he doesn't hold the key to a win in a team sport. It must happen, he cannot make it happen. But what else? Frankly, I don't care.

Tendulkar's journey is about joy and purity and a landmark is merely a comfort stop.


http://www.cricinfo.com/magazine/content/current/story/449959.html
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kban1

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Re: Mumbai ka don kaun ? Sachin Sachin!!!!
« Reply #48 on: February 26, 2010, 05:56:16 PM »
'Finish it, finish it'

Virender Sehwag, a man many believed would get to 200 before the master did, relives the innings of a lifetime

As told to Nagraj Gollapudi

February 25, 2010

I am the superstitious kind: I never praise a shot because I fear the moment I do so, the batsman gets out. Till Sachin was on 190 in Gwalior, I was rooted in my seat in the dressing room. But when he got to 190, I couldn't contain myself. I came out and started cheering every stroke till he got to 200.

When he got to 180, I knew he was going to get it, but when he was in the 190s I was concerned. If I was in his place, I would have tried to finish it quickly, because the longer I take, the greater the possibility of me getting out. I would try to wrap it up in three or four balls.

Also, he was looking really tired: he had been clutching his right side and showing signs of cramping. So when I stepped out of my seat, I was just saying, "Finish it, finish it."

But Sachin is never in a hurry. He is a different kind of batsman - one who can rotate the strike with ease and understands there is no need to take any chances. Whenever I have been on the brink of landmarks (Melbourne in 2003, Multan 2004) he has instructed me to do this and do that. But those are things only he can do.

You might say, this is 200 - a figure no batsman in the history of the game has crossed - but then we are talking about Tendulkar. He looked calm and confident even when he was at the non-striker's end in those final moments. I knew he just needed one ball, and I also knew he would get the opportunity.

He had started the innings in a confident mood. As soon as he hit his first boundary, off the third ball of the second over, he walked up to me and said the pitch was full of runs and we only needed to time the ball. He told me not to think of boundaries or going after the bowler. He was right: throughout he picked the gaps and played the ball as he saw it. He was not thinking too much and that helped.

Ten years down the line if I am asked to pick a shot or two from his innings I would love to pick many. But the ones that were special to me were the cover drives off the back foot past extra cover, and the punch, once again on the back foot, past point, off Wayne Parnell. Another incredible shot was the straight six over Roelof van der Merwe's head. The left-arm spinner is a difficult one to get away, but Sachin was able to make the room and the energy to hit it clean over the sight screen.

It is not an easy summit for a batsman to conquer because he needs to possess a variety of attributes. In the past I mentioned on four or five occasions that Sachin had the capability to score a double-hundred in ODIs. I was confident only he could achieve such a feat only because of his experience and the kind of form he is in at the moment.

Importantly, he had the hunger and the patience to last for the entire 50 overs. You need to bat out the entire innings to score a double. And it is not so easy because it is not just about hitting boundaries; it is also rotating the strike. I knew if he had 150 balls, he could do it, and he did it in 147 deliveries.

I do not want to dwell here on my own batting, but in the past certain people have said I could have scored 200 in one-day cricket, because of my performances in Tests, where I have got near to a hundred before lunch. But I have had the tendency to take too many risks once I reach the 120 or 130-run mark in ODIs. That is difference between me and Sachin.

We have had chats about him scoring 200. He thought it was difficult, but I told him only he could do it. Last year in New Zealand, when he retired on 163 I told him he had missed the opportunity, but he said "Agar meri kismat mein hoga toh woh mil jayega [It will eventually happen if I am destined to do it]." He said the same when he got 175 against Australia last year. On Wednesday he said "Woh likha tha, toh mil gaya [I got what was destined]".

Back in 1998 everyone felt Sachin was in prime form. I was not in the Indian team then. But I have seen him over the last decade and he is still improving with every match, he is practising more than anybody else in the nets, working hard on his fitness. I think he is in better form now than he was in 1998.

Nagraj Gollapudi is an assistant editor at Cricinfo

http://www.cricinfo.com/magazine/content/current/story/450022.html
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kban1

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Re: Mumbai ka don kaun ? Sachin Sachin!!!!
« Reply #49 on: February 26, 2010, 06:06:46 PM »
India's Sachin Tendulkar proves you can be a sporting icon without turning into a monster

Telegraph Sport's Simon Briggs salutes Indian maestro Sachin Tendulkar - a man who is modest in victory and gracious in defeat.
 
By Simon Briggs
25 Feb 2010


Surely every neutral cricket-lover - and even a few South African supporters - must have welcomed the news that Sachin Tendulkar has scored the first double-hundred in one-day internationals.

With his extraordinary performances over the past two decades, not to mention his exemplary conduct off the field, Sachin Tendulkar has proved that it is possible to be a sporting icon without turning into a monster.

 
In the light of the various indiscretions committed in recent weeks by Tiger Woods, John Terry and Ashley Cole, it would be easy to conclude that while power corrupts, sporting success corrupts absolutely.

Tendulkar is the ultimate counter-example. In his own way, he can compete with any of these men for eminence. The most famous Indian since Mahatma Gandhi, he has admitted resorting to wigs and fake spectacles just to get to the cinema undisturbed.

And yet, despite spending more than 20 years at the top of his sport,Tendulkar has never become tangled up with a Bollywood actress, or been accused of giving out pitch and weather information to an illegal bookmaker.

A cynic might add the rider, “as far as we know”. After all, that slippery PR fixer Max Clifford has repeatedly insisted that the only reason Tiger got caught was because he was badly advised.

But everything about Tendulkar’s public persona backs up his squeaky-clean image. The man is modest in victory and gracious in defeat, while his post-match comments are invariably diplomatic. It is hard to remember him being drawn into a single controversy – at least, not one that stood up to scrutiny.

Compare that to Woods, who is notorious for chucking his clubs out of the bag whenever he hits a bum shot, or the foul-mouthed Premier League stars who occupy so much of our airtime. Even Roger Federer, easily the most impressive member of the “Gillette trio”, cannot resist the odd cheap shot.

In Woods’s case, his apologists argue that his problems start with his upbringing. By putting him on national TV at the age of four, they suggest, his father Earl gave him no chance of developing a normal identity.

Well, Tendulkar started pretty early too. Not at four, admittedly. But he was known as a child prodigy around Mumbai from the time he was 12. By 14, India’s most admired batsman Sunil Gavaskar had given him a pair of pads, and the following year he notched a hundred on his first-class debut. No pressure, then!

We could barter statistics for days, but suffice it to say that Tendulkar started scoring international runs at 16, and is still doing so today. The gentle dip that afflicted him in the middle of the last decade - when he was struggling with tennis elbow – has been firmly consigned to the past, judging by a sequence of four hundreds in the last six Test innings.

And now we have this monumental 200 – an achievement never matched in any one of the previous 2961 one-day internationals. Let’s hear it for Sachin Tendulkar, a truly great sportsman, and – just as importantly – a thoroughly admirable man.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/cricket/international/india/7314049/Indias-Sachin-Tendulkar-proves-you-can-be-a-sporting-icon-without-turning-into-a-monster.html
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kban1

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Re: Mumbai ka don kaun ? Sachin Sachin!!!!
« Reply #50 on: February 26, 2010, 06:09:34 PM »
200* Amazing Facts About Sachin Tendulkar

Alan Tyers:

February 25th, 2010


EXPERIENCE! Sachin has now played over 12,000 games of cricket, putting him third in the all-time list behind WG Grace and a Mr Rachel Heyhoe-Flint of Wolverhampton, who has played TWO games of cricket every day since 1927, but only because his wife made him.

POWER! Despite being only four feet tall, Sachin can bench press 460 pounds. If Sachin was an ant, this would be the equivalent of AntSachin lifting a Cornish PASTY.

BODYHAIR! Sachin’s body, like that of the dolphin, the tortoise and the SUSPICIOUSLY PERFUMED GIGOLO, is entirely hairless. This enables him to glide aerodynamically across the crease, not unlike bong-happy swim legend Michael Phelps in the local baths.

FOOTWEAR! Universally known by his nickname, The Little Cobbler, Sachin is an avid collector of old shoes and is believed to be the owner of a staggering FOUR pairs of trainers.

MOUSTACHE! Sachin does NOT have a moustache.

MARKETABILITY! A 2008 act of Parliament made it illegal for any product to be advertised in India without bearing the face of Sachin on it. Bollywood favourite Shilpa Shetty was charged and sentenced to six months (suspended) for attempting to launch a range of INTIMATE DEPILATORIES that showed only Sachin’s KNEES on the promotional material.

MY HERO! Sachin’s cricketing idol is the powerful former Barnet and Peterborough centre-forward Ken Charlery, who has never played cricket. Despite this, Sachin goes through a routine at the crease before each delivery where he WHISPERS to himself “What would Ken Charlery do?” before visualising the bruising lower-league target man executing a shot.

DADDY! Some of the Indian team were not even BORN when Sachin began his cricket career, making him SEVERAL YEARS older than them. Incredibly, Ishant Sharma is in fact so young that Sachin is old enough to be an OLDER RELATIVE of his.

BOX OFFICE! Sachin is so popular in India that the entire country grinds to a halt and downs TOOLS when he is batting. With India currently the only nation on earth not in financial meltdown, this loss of vital productivity means that Sachin’s double ton has effectively sent the whole planet spiralling towards total economic DISASTER.

* Disclaimer: feature may contain less than 200 amazing facts

http://wisdencricketer.com/blogs/blog/2010/02/25/alan-tyers-200-amazing-facts-about-sachin-tendulkar/
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Blwe_torch

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Re: Mumbai ka don kaun ? Sachin Sachin!!!!
« Reply #51 on: February 26, 2010, 06:55:57 PM »
Thanks Kban............for taking the trouble.
This is great! ::cheers::
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Re: Mumbai ka don kaun ? Sachin Sachin!!!!
« Reply #52 on: February 26, 2010, 07:27:08 PM »
Congrats, Sachin!


by a Pakistani blogger...

When Charles Coventry was hovering in the 180s against Bangladesh, I voiced my fear that Saeed Anwar’s record seemed in danger of being broken. In response, a friend said, “Bah! Don’t get too attached to records, it’s a sign of mediocrity.” While it was some consolation that Coventry didn’t actually break the record – he equalled it – the gloss was still removed from that proud feeling that my countryman held the world record for the highest individual ODI score. That too, one of the finest left-handed batsmen of his time, and there’s no hiding the fact that his feat was made extra-special owing to the fact that he scored the runs against India.

Once again, as Sachin Tendulkar reached 150 against South Africa, my fellow sports fan at Dawn.com and I gave each other nervous, knowing looks. He said that whenever Tendulkar reaches 150 (he has done it on no less than three previous occasions!), he starts getting anxious.

We stopped working when Tendulkar got to 160 and started calling and texting friends to inform them that Saeed bhai’s record was under threat from the master-blaster. And as he reached 180, with almost eight overs to spare, we had resigned ourselves to the fact that Tendulkar was on his way to another record.

So when he did it, there was nothing left to do but stand up and applaud the monstrous effort. I mean, if there is anyone who deserves to hold the record, it’s Tendulkar. I’d rather have Tendulkar break Anwar’s record than any other batsman, especially if that batsman is an Indian. How would I have felt, for example, if Sourav Ganguly had done it? (Apologies to Indian fans, but that guy was really annoying). Or, for that matter, would my feelings have been as bittersweet if Coventry had actually broken the record?

The fact that Tendulkar smashed his way past Anwar’s grand total against a highly respected South African side – albeit on a cemented Gwalior pitch where the Protean bowlers averaged eight short-pitched deliveries per over – made the accomplishment even more commendable. I even found myself getting mad at M.S. Dhoni for taking most of the strike after Tendulkar had crossed 194, reducing his chances of making a double ton. Who makes 200 runs in an ODI, anyway?

Watching Tendulkar break Anwar’s record was surreal. It was also heartbreaking at times. But most of all, it was fantastic! Really, Sachin ala re bhaiya!

Hafsa Adil is a sports editor at Dawn.com.


http://blog.dawn.com/2010/02/25/congrats-sachin/
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kingcool1432

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Re: Mumbai ka don kaun ? Sachin Sachin!!!!
« Reply #53 on: February 26, 2010, 10:19:30 PM »
Bow to the Master  ::Whip::

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inoc

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Re: Mumbai ka don kaun ? Sachin Sachin!!!!
« Reply #54 on: February 27, 2010, 12:04:03 AM »
Congrats, Sachin!


by a Pakistani blogger...
How would I have felt, for example, if Sourav Ganguly had done it? (Apologies to Indian fans, but that guy was really annoying).

I wonder how many in this DG will agree with our Pakistani friend here. ;)
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ramshorns

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Re: Mumbai ka don kaun ? Sachin Sachin!!!!
« Reply #55 on: February 27, 2010, 12:31:50 AM »
Congrats, Sachin!


by a Pakistani blogger...
How would I have felt, for example, if Sourav Ganguly had done it? (Apologies to Indian fans, but that guy was really annoying).

I wonder how many in this DG will agree with our Pakistani friend here. ;)
Blwe posted this.  As usual he did not read it before posting it and I do not even need to prove that for obvious reasons.   Damn Blwe.   Now Blwe may even do a 180 and say that Viv is miles ahead of SRT as a batsman because Ganguly is literally cursed in a piece that is praising SRT.   These past few days have been real hard on Blwe.  First he is buried all over in all the Viv vs SRT debates then he starts a poll and votes for someone that is not even a part of his original selection options which tells that he is not really putting enough thought into his cricketing selections and then this where Ganguly is slandered for no reason.  If only he read this thing in its entirety would he have not only posted this but using his mod powers deleted it had someone else posted it.
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"Symonds is a great guy. Whatever happened in Sydney, that's all history now. We don't want to keep on thinking about what happened then. Hopefully, with his performance and mine, we can do a lot of good things for Mumbai Indians. "
Harbhajan Singh insists he has no problem playing with Symonds

inoc

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Re: Mumbai ka don kaun ? Sachin Sachin!!!!
« Reply #56 on: February 27, 2010, 02:10:01 AM »
Congrats, Sachin!


by a Pakistani blogger...
How would I have felt, for example, if Sourav Ganguly had done it? (Apologies to Indian fans, but that guy was really annoying).

I wonder how many in this DG will agree with our Pakistani friend here. ;)
Blwe posted this.  As usual he did not read it before posting it and I do not even need to prove that for obvious reasons.   Damn Blwe.   Now Blwe may even do a 180 and say that Viv is miles ahead of SRT as a batsman because Ganguly is literally cursed in a piece that is praising SRT.   These past few days have been real hard on Blwe.  First he is buried all over in all the Viv vs SRT debates then he starts a poll and votes for someone that is not even a part of his original selection options which tells that he is not really putting enough thought into his cricketing selections and then this where Ganguly is slandered for no reason.  If only he read this thing in its entirety would he have not only posted this but using his mod powers deleted it had someone else posted it.

blwe may have posted it but you certainly didnt read it before answering it IMO.

Sorry SG is not at all cursed, read it again.

IT WOULD UPSET A PAKISTANI IF SG BROKE THE RECORD

I would give anything to get under the pakistani skin like this. (this was a comment totally unrelated to SG, for the Pakistani guy)

SG always did and he deserves kudos for that, not that it matters to you, anything against SG, and any lollipops for your favs is OK or you.


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Cover Point

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Re: Mumbai ka don kaun ? Sachin Sachin!!!!
« Reply #57 on: February 27, 2010, 02:11:32 AM »
Congrats, Sachin!


by a Pakistani blogger...
How would I have felt, for example, if Sourav Ganguly had done it? (Apologies to Indian fans, but that guy was really annoying).

I wonder how many in this DG will agree with our Pakistani friend here. ;)

that was his one redeeming quality
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ramshorns

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Re: Mumbai ka don kaun ? Sachin Sachin!!!!
« Reply #58 on: February 27, 2010, 02:12:50 AM »
Congrats, Sachin!


by a Pakistani blogger...
How would I have felt, for example, if Sourav Ganguly had done it? (Apologies to Indian fans, but that guy was really annoying).

I wonder how many in this DG will agree with our Pakistani friend here. ;)
Blwe posted this.  As usual he did not read it before posting it and I do not even need to prove that for obvious reasons.   Damn Blwe.   Now Blwe may even do a 180 and say that Viv is miles ahead of SRT as a batsman because Ganguly is literally cursed in a piece that is praising SRT.   These past few days have been real hard on Blwe.  First he is buried all over in all the Viv vs SRT debates then he starts a poll and votes for someone that is not even a part of his original selection options which tells that he is not really putting enough thought into his cricketing selections and then this where Ganguly is slandered for no reason.  If only he read this thing in its entirety would he have not only posted this but using his mod powers deleted it had someone else posted it.

blwe may have posted it but you certainly didnt read it before answering it IMO.

Sorry SG is not at all cursed, read it again.

IT WOULD UPSET A PAKISTANI IF SG BROKE THE RECORD

I would give anything to get under the pakistani skin like this. (this was a comment totally unrelated to SG, for the Pakistani guy)

SG always did and he deserves kudos for that, not that it matters to you, anything against SG, and any lollipops for your favs is OK or you.
okay.  Way to take it up for a fellow Ganguly fanatic. :)
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"Symonds is a great guy. Whatever happened in Sydney, that's all history now. We don't want to keep on thinking about what happened then. Hopefully, with his performance and mine, we can do a lot of good things for Mumbai Indians. "
Harbhajan Singh insists he has no problem playing with Symonds

inoc

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Re: Mumbai ka don kaun ? Sachin Sachin!!!!
« Reply #59 on: February 27, 2010, 02:19:08 AM »
Congrats, Sachin!


by a Pakistani blogger...
How would I have felt, for example, if Sourav Ganguly had done it? (Apologies to Indian fans, but that guy was really annoying).

I wonder how many in this DG will agree with our Pakistani friend here. ;)

that was his one redeeming quality

in your opinion my friend. if he did it, I will be a greater ganguly hater than you.
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inoc

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Re: Mumbai ka don kaun ? Sachin Sachin!!!!
« Reply #60 on: February 27, 2010, 02:24:46 AM »
Congrats, Sachin!


by a Pakistani blogger...
How would I have felt, for example, if Sourav Ganguly had done it? (Apologies to Indian fans, but that guy was really annoying).

I wonder how many in this DG will agree with our Pakistani friend here. ;)
Blwe posted this.  As usual he did not read it before posting it and I do not even need to prove that for obvious reasons.   Damn Blwe.   Now Blwe may even do a 180 and say that Viv is miles ahead of SRT as a batsman because Ganguly is literally cursed in a piece that is praising SRT.   These past few days have been real hard on Blwe.  First he is buried all over in all the Viv vs SRT debates then he starts a poll and votes for someone that is not even a part of his original selection options which tells that he is not really putting enough thought into his cricketing selections and then this where Ganguly is slandered for no reason.  If only he read this thing in its entirety would he have not only posted this but using his mod powers deleted it had someone else posted it.

blwe may have posted it but you certainly didnt read it before answering it IMO.

Sorry SG is not at all cursed, read it again.

IT WOULD UPSET A PAKISTANI IF SG BROKE THE RECORD

I would give anything to get under the pakistani skin like this. (this was a comment totally unrelated to SG, for the Pakistani guy)

SG always did and he deserves kudos for that, not that it matters to you, anything against SG, and any lollipops for your favs is OK or you.
okay.  Way to take it up for a fellow Ganguly fanatic. :)

it seems that the person who told you to have an opinion for yourself, forgot to tell you that that others are also allowed that.

nobody is taking it up for anybody.......unlike you and very very special people....I am speaking for myself.
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kban1

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Re: Mumbai ka don kaun ? Sachin Sachin!!!!
« Reply #61 on: February 27, 2010, 05:24:39 AM »
Sizzling Sachin powers on as Lee cuts back

PETER ROEBUCK


February 26, 2010
 
It was the Boxing Day Test of 1999. India were showcasing their champion batsman, Sachin Tendulkar, no longer a brilliant stripling, already acknowledged as one of the masters of the age. Australia had summoned a brash young fast bowler with a toothpaste smile going by the name of Brett Lee. Their confrontation was compelling, a match within a match. Eleven years later, they shared the headlines again, Tendulkar for becoming the first batsman to score 200 in a one-day international, Lee for announcing his retirement from Test cricket. Such are the cruel ironies and sweet pleasures of sport.

Lee was magnificent in that MCG Test. Bowling at roughly the speed of light, he pounded the Indians with bumpers, tormented them with outswingers, demolished them with late inswing. The debutant took 5-47 as Australia secured a large and eventually decisive lead of 167 runs. It was a searing start from a superb athlete destined to become his country's fourth-highest wicket taker.

But Tendulkar was his equal. Defiant and courageous, he refused to give second best to the surging speedster. Countering with thrusts of his own - cuts, pulls and glides off his pads - the maestro scored 116 of India's 238. Tendulkar collected 52 in the second dig but could not stop the visitors losing by 180 runs.

As far as Test cricket is concerned, Lee's fire has been extinguished. He's had a wonderful career, and everyone will wish him well, but it's hard to see him regaining his place in any form of the game. His best hope is to join the emerging brigade of ageing speedsters able to focus entirely on the shorter format. Hitherto, cricketers eager to secure national selection were obliged to play Shield cricket. As Dirk Nannes and Shaun Tait have shown, shortcuts are now possible. Even so, Lee must fear for his prospects. Once his greatest asset, his body is not to be trusted.

Contrastingly, Tendulkar continues to go from strength to strength. His dazzling double century in Gwalior reinforced his reputation as the finest batsman to appear in the past 60 years. After two decades of intense scrutiny and hard campaigns, he was fresh enough to bat an entire innings and collar all sorts of bowling. He has been sustained by a simple love of the game and, especially, batting. As Andre Agassi has confirmed, it's not as easy as it sounds. A lot can be lost once sport becomes a job.

Nor was Tendulkar playing against mugs. The might of South Africa was arrayed against him. Certainly the pitch was amiable and the outfield fast, but that has often been the case and the mark had remained intact. Moreover, he conquered not with brute force but with the purity of style that has been his hallmark since first he arrived as a child at Shivaji Park, a young boy seeking opportunity and competition. His ability to combine classical and virtuoso has been unique.

No batsman has been as rewarding to watch in the past decades, and none has been superior. Among past masters, Viv Richards and Sunil Gavaskar stand out. Gavaskar ruled with meticulous technique. Often he played within himself, relying on patience and precision to build his score. As much was the duty of the stoical opening batsman. Not that he was always cautious. Indeed, he played some of the most breath-taking innings the game has known. Then his range of shots was extraordinary and the execution vibrant. Before him, too, Indian batsmen were regarded as frail. After him the word was never again spoken. That is the measure of his triumph.

Richards dictated with relish. He was a majestic batsman who thrived in the heat of the hottest battle. But he was moody. In his pomp, from 1976 to 1983 or thereabouts, he imposed himself by force of stroke and character. For all his magnificence, though, he averaged 50 in Test cricket, a modest return for a batsman of his stature not called upon to face the West Indies pace machine. The figures tell of a batsman at the mercy of his temper. Longevity has a part to play in the assessment.

Among the moderns, Ricky Ponting, Jacques Kallis and Brian Lara stand apart. Ponting's greatness is an established fact. Over a long period, he has scored heavily in all forms of the game and against all types of bowling. Kallis has been underestimated. In part it is because he often ends up in the all-rounder section. As a batsman he is a colossus. The figures speak for themselves.

Lara has been the genius of the age. His best has been the best. On his day, no one could touch him, not even Tendulkar. Almost single-handed he has won Test matches, even series. But he was fitful, endured too many bad patches. Lara has acknowledged the merits of his rival, an opinion at once humble and accurate.

Tendulkar is not flawless. Of all modern batsmen, though, he has been the most complete. And he's not finished yet. Alas, it's not possible to be as sanguine about his foe and friend from that epic confrontation in Melbourne, the popular paceman from the southern beaches, Brett Lee.

http://www.smh.com.au/sport/cricket/sizzling-sachin-powers-on-as-lee-cuts-back-20100225-p5yk.html
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kban1

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Re: Mumbai ka don kaun ? Sachin Sachin!!!!
« Reply #62 on: February 27, 2010, 05:29:58 AM »
Clarke praises Tendulkar as best ever

GREG BUCKLE

February 25, 2010
 
Australia's Michael Clarke says it's no surprise to him to see Sachin Tendulkar become the first player to score 200 in a men's one-day international.

Tendulkar hit a majestic 200 not out in Gwalior against South Africa, beating the previous highest score of 194, jointly made by Zimbabwe's Charles Coventry against Bangladesh in Bulawayo in 2009 and Pakistan's Saeed Anwar against India at Chennai in 1997.

"His record speaks for itself. I can't say I'm surprised," Clarke said on Thursday in Wellington.

"He's probably the greatest batsman I've ever seen play, live."

Tendulkar reached the landmark in the last over off 147 deliveries, hitting 25 boundaries and three sixes. India made 3-401 and South Africa replied with 248 all out including an unbeaten 114 from AB De Villiers.

India claimed a 2-0 lead in the three-match series, as Tendulkar added the ODI highest-score record to his world marks for most runs and centuries in Tests and one-day cricket.

"I didn't watch any of it but I'd like to get back this afternoon and see some highlights," said Clarke as his Australia Twenty20 side prepared for Friday's clash with New Zealand.

Clarke says the 36-year-old's Tendulkar's longevity in the game has been one of his greatest achievements.

"He's a wonderful guy and someone I not only enjoy watching on TV, but I've loved having the opportunity to play against him as well," said Clarke, 28.

"He has got so much class. His greatest strength is the longevity, to be able to be so successful at a young age and to still be doing the same thing 20 years on.

"He made his (Test) debut at 16 and he's still as good as ever, if not better. We're blessed to still have such a great player playing this game."

After being named man of the match, Tendulkar praised his one-billion strong army of fans in India.

"I'd like to dedicate this double-hundred to the people of India for standing behind me for the last 20 years throughout the ups and downs," he said.

"I felt that when I was 175-plus and it was the 42nd over I had a chance, but I wasn't actually thinking of it (double-century). It was only when I got closer to it that I thought about it."

http://news.smh.com.au/breaking-news-sport/clarke-praises-tendulkar-as-best-ever-20100225-p5jq.html
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Re: Mumbai ka don kaun ? Sachin Sachin!!!!
« Reply #63 on: February 27, 2010, 05:34:57 AM »
Sizzling Sachin powers on as Lee cuts back

PETER ROEBUCK


February 26, 2010
 
It was the Boxing Day Test of 1999. India were showcasing their champion batsman, Sachin Tendulkar, no longer a brilliant stripling, already acknowledged as one of the masters of the age. Australia had summoned a brash young fast bowler with a toothpaste smile going by the name of Brett Lee. Their confrontation was compelling, a match within a match. Eleven years later, they shared the headlines again, Tendulkar for becoming the first batsman to score 200 in a one-day international, Lee for announcing his retirement from Test cricket. Such are the cruel ironies and sweet pleasures of sport.

Lee was magnificent in that MCG Test. Bowling at roughly the speed of light, he pounded the Indians with bumpers, tormented them with outswingers, demolished them with late inswing. The debutant took 5-47 as Australia secured a large and eventually decisive lead of 167 runs. It was a searing start from a superb athlete destined to become his country's fourth-highest wicket taker.

But Tendulkar was his equal. Defiant and courageous, he refused to give second best to the surging speedster. Countering with thrusts of his own - cuts, pulls and glides off his pads - the maestro scored 116 of India's 238. Tendulkar collected 52 in the second dig but could not stop the visitors losing by 180 runs.

As far as Test cricket is concerned, Lee's fire has been extinguished. He's had a wonderful career, and everyone will wish him well, but it's hard to see him regaining his place in any form of the game. His best hope is to join the emerging brigade of ageing speedsters able to focus entirely on the shorter format. Hitherto, cricketers eager to secure national selection were obliged to play Shield cricket. As Dirk Nannes and Shaun Tait have shown, shortcuts are now possible. Even so, Lee must fear for his prospects. Once his greatest asset, his body is not to be trusted.

Contrastingly, Tendulkar continues to go from strength to strength. His dazzling double century in Gwalior reinforced his reputation as the finest batsman to appear in the past 60 years. After two decades of intense scrutiny and hard campaigns, he was fresh enough to bat an entire innings and collar all sorts of bowling. He has been sustained by a simple love of the game and, especially, batting. As Andre Agassi has confirmed, it's not as easy as it sounds. A lot can be lost once sport becomes a job.

Nor was Tendulkar playing against mugs. The might of South Africa was arrayed against him. Certainly the pitch was amiable and the outfield fast, but that has often been the case and the mark had remained intact. Moreover, he conquered not with brute force but with the purity of style that has been his hallmark since first he arrived as a child at Shivaji Park, a young boy seeking opportunity and competition. His ability to combine classical and virtuoso has been unique.

No batsman has been as rewarding to watch in the past decades, and none has been superior. Among past masters, Viv Richards and Sunil Gavaskar stand out. Gavaskar ruled with meticulous technique. Often he played within himself, relying on patience and precision to build his score. As much was the duty of the stoical opening batsman. Not that he was always cautious. Indeed, he played some of the most breath-taking innings the game has known. Then his range of shots was extraordinary and the execution vibrant. Before him, too, Indian batsmen were regarded as frail. After him the word was never again spoken. That is the measure of his triumph.

Richards dictated with relish. He was a majestic batsman who thrived in the heat of the hottest battle. But he was moody. In his pomp, from 1976 to 1983 or thereabouts, he imposed himself by force of stroke and character. For all his magnificence, though, he averaged 50 in Test cricket, a modest return for a batsman of his stature not called upon to face the West Indies pace machine. The figures tell of a batsman at the mercy of his temper. Longevity has a part to play in the assessment.

Among the moderns, Ricky Ponting, Jacques Kallis and Brian Lara stand apart. Ponting's greatness is an established fact. Over a long period, he has scored heavily in all forms of the game and against all types of bowling. Kallis has been underestimated. In part it is because he often ends up in the all-rounder section. As a batsman he is a colossus. The figures speak for themselves.

Lara has been the genius of the age. His best has been the best. On his day, no one could touch him, not even Tendulkar. Almost single-handed he has won Test matches, even series. But he was fitful, endured too many bad patches. Lara has acknowledged the merits of his rival, an opinion at once humble and accurate.

Tendulkar is not flawless. Of all modern batsmen, though, he has been the most complete. And he's not finished yet. Alas, it's not possible to be as sanguine about his foe and friend from that epic confrontation in Melbourne, the popular paceman from the southern beaches, Brett Lee.

http://www.smh.com.au/sport/cricket/sizzling-sachin-powers-on-as-lee-cuts-back-20100225-p5yk.html



Nice article.
Plz note this assesment of Viv...

"Richards dictated with relish. He was a majestic batsman who thrived in the heat of the hottest battle. But he was moody. In his pomp, from 1976 to 1983 or thereabouts, he imposed himself by force of stroke and character. For all his magnificence, though, he averaged 50 in Test cricket, a modest return for a batsman of his stature not called upon to face the West Indies pace machine. The figures tell of a batsman at the mercy of his temper. Longevity has a part to play in the assessment."


« Last Edit: February 27, 2010, 12:37:02 PM by Blwe_torch »
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Blwe_torch

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Re: Mumbai ka don kaun ? Sachin Sachin!!!!
« Reply #64 on: February 27, 2010, 12:38:41 PM »
Sachin is better than Bradman, reckons Harbhajan Singh


Eulogising milestone man Sachin Tendulkar for his historic ODI double hundred, India's star off-spinner Harbhajan Singh reckons his illustrious teammate is better than Australian great Sir Don Bradman.

Harbhajan could not witness the record-breaking double century as he skipped the first two matches of the series due to his sister's wedding.

"I am short of words to praise Sachin. Some players compared him with Don Bradman. Although I have not seen Bradman playing but I am confident, he (Sachin) is better than him for which his records speak," Harbhajan said.

The off-spinner said Tendulkar's hunger for runs and amazing focus makes him an altogether different cricketer.

"Even after scoring 150 in the ODI, Sachin never looks tired and keeps his focus on the game. I have learnt a lot from him, be it on ground or in dressing room. I always observe how he prepares himself for every match," he said.

http://www.indianexpress.com/news/sachin-is-better-than-bradman-reckons-harbhajan-singh/585201/
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Re: Mumbai ka don kaun ? Sachin Sachin!!!!
« Reply #65 on: February 28, 2010, 07:43:01 AM »
Sachin is more than just a cricketer

Harsha Bhogle

Sachin Tendulkar sugar coated the recent reality of India and gave its people something to cheer about. It is not easy to possess the mandate to lift the spirits of such a large nation but he has done that consistently. The comparison with Sir Donald Bradman is not restricted to his batting alone. Like the great man who brought cheer to post war Australia, Tendulkar allowed India to momentarily forget fires and bombs and inflation and terrorist threats. It was like that with the century after England so graciously agreed to tour after 26/11. It has been like that for a long time. For better or worse cricket is more than a sport in India; Tendulkar is more than just a cricketer. Where our elected representatives callously fritter away the mandate people give them, Tendulkar has stayed true to it.

And he has never forgotten why he started playing the game in the first place. The best have lofty ambitions when they begin but soon commerce, like a tenacious worm, gnaws into them. Fame surrounds them and prevents the fresh air of reason from breaking through. They acquire sycophants, that great curse of success. Playing the game becomes a means to a seemingly superior but, in reality, a hollower end. Tendulkar has kept those demons at bay. He has made more money than anyone else, acquired greater fame than is imaginable but you could never guess that from the way he plays his cricket. He remains the servant, pursues the game with purity. Through the last decade India have been well served by like minded giants.
And he works as hard as anybody has. Lance Armstrong once said that he wins the Tour de France not when he is cycling down the Champs-Elysees but when he is out in the mountains facing icy winds while others are cozying in their blankets for an extra hour. Two years ago Tendulkar realised that his future lay in the way his body coped; that eventually his body rather than a bowler would get him. During the first IPL, as he struggled with his groin injury, he admitted that he found continuous rehab very difficult to live with. Once fit, he was like the child again, able to do what he wanted without worrying about whether his body was accomplice or traitor. And so he trained harder and rested well. You could see the effect as he scampered between wickets. Tendulkar’s delightful second wind is the result of what you and I have not seen; hours in the gym and in training.

As a result, Tendulkar’s end game is nowhere in sight. He is peeling off centuries like he did in his prime, the old air of predictability is still around; he is grinding his way through when needed, clobbering the ball when required. In this extraordinary long distance race he is running, this looks like a mid-race burst rather than like the finishing kick his age suggests it should be.
So why has no one else scored a double century in limited overs cricket so far? Well, because it is very difficult for a start. Assuming 300 balls you should expect to get no more than 150 which means you need to bat at a strike rate of 133; you should be mentally alert because one casual shot, one moment of disrespect, could be your undoing. But, let’s admit, because the combination of pitches, outfields and boundary ropes has rarely tilted the balance so much in the batsman’s favour. At Gwalior, the groundsman told one half of the class they were not wanted; the bowlers were the extras in a movie seeking, at best, a talking part. The stage had been prepared for Tendulkar but he still had to deliver an unforgettable performance.
Inevitably the question will be asked: what next? I know there is only thing he genuinely covets and that is not in his hands. In twelve months Tendulkar hopes to play his sixth and last World Cup. So far his relationship with the World Cup has been like that of a child who scurries to the rosogulla shop only to find it shut everytime. If he was a golfer seeking a Masters win or a tennis player hoping to win another Grand Slam, he could plan for it but he doesn’t hold the key to a win in a team sport. It must happen, he cannot make it happen. But what else? Frankly, I don’t care.

Tendulkar’s journey is about joy and purity and a landmark is merely a comfort stop.

http://www.indianexpress.com/news/sachin-is-more-than-just-a-cricketer/584583/
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Re: Mumbai ka don kaun ? Sachin Sachin!!!!
« Reply #66 on: March 01, 2010, 03:58:02 PM »
The greatest
Sunday 28th February 2010
by Boria Majumdar

To write something about Sachin Tendulkar is perhaps the most difficult task confronting a scholar working on cricket. While not as difficult as scaling the peak of a double hundred in ODIs, it is certainly an arduous task for any contemporary sportswriter. Everything about the maestro has been written; millions of pages of newsprint have analysed his strokes, deconstructed his batting and applauded his humility and patriotism. What more can you say about the legend that your readers will find interesting to read?

Having thus prepared my defences, let me turn this piece into an assertion, one that is gradually becoming contemporary cricket's most significant debate-that Sachin Tendulkar is the greatest cricketer ever to have played the game, greater than our very own SMG, the celebrated Vivian Richards and even the legendary Sir Donald Bradman. While acknowledging that these debates are impossible to definitively settle and comparisons across eras have little basis in fact on occasions, the very fact that Sachin has scored 93 international hundreds and that he has played with the pressure of a billion-plus expecting miracles for well over 20 years places him at a pedestal above all cricketers to have played the game at the highest level.

Yes, Sachin can never hope to equal Sir Donald's staggering Test match batting average of 99.94, but the versatility and adaptability that Sachin has shown isn't something Sir Donald was ever needed to demonstrate. The varied conditions at which Sachin has played and thrived, the burden of the heavy expectations that he has shouldered for two decades and the intensity and humility with which he has played the game, truly makes him the greatest. While acknowledging Bradman's Test batting average, one is also forced to introduce into the debate that special series when his average had fallen drastically to 56 plus, one in which Sir Donald had looked mortal while faced with the guile of the shrewd Douglas Jardine and his bowling spearhead Harold Larwood. Did Bradman actually not play the first game of that series in 1932-33, one in which Stan McCabe scored a brilliant 187 against hostile bodyline bowling? A definitive answer to this question we will never know, but there are enough doubts to suggest that Sachin is certainly on the same pedestal as Bradman, if not a notch above.

With technology deconstructing each move of the modern day batsman and with fielding having improved several notches over the years, the modern sportsman needs to be that much more fit to survive at the international level. And to have played 442 one-day internationals and over 160 Test matches means Sachin's physical ability is no less superhuman than his batting talent. He has actually played over 1,265 days of international cricket, a statistic staggering enough to send a cold chill down the spine of any contemporary sportsman. Add to this his comment that he would once again love to bat 50 overs and you will have an opportunity of a sneak peak into the mental frame of the maestro.

Yes, Bradman had catapulted Australia from the throes of a depression and had batted in a way in which only he could, but did Bradman ever have to face the adulation and expectations of a billion plus sports fans, who have little else but cricket to invest in? Indian cricket is the country's only secular religion and Sachin is one responsible for nurturing and fanning this passion for over two decades.

The other striking feature of Sachin, which endears him to us all, is his nationalism. A cursory glance into his cricket gear and it is apparent who he plays for. The Tricolour is always visible on his helmet, his gloves are specially designed with the colours of the Indian flag and he has a flag pinned to his cricket coffin. Finally, when you hear him utter those immortal words-"My name is Sachin Tendulkar and I play for India"- the debate is put to rest once and for all. Sachin isn't a cricketer; he is a phenomenon and an icon who we are blessed to see practice his art in front of our eyes. Just like all things great, Sachin's cricket career too will come to an end in two or three years. However, his end will be with a difference. With his retirement, cricket, India's favourite obsession, will be rendered poorer, something that has never perhaps happened before. So it is time we savour each innings he plays and celebrate each catch he takes and ready ourselves for his last battle on home turf-the battle to win the 2011 World Cup for India. He had brought his team close in South Africa seven years earlier; perhaps it is time to go the distance come February-March 2011. Here's wishing him all the very best in the coming months.

http://www.espnstar.com/opinion/columnists/column/item61774/
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Re: Mumbai ka don kaun ? Sachin Sachin!!!!
« Reply #67 on: March 01, 2010, 04:00:55 PM »
The man who got there first
      Monday 1st March 2010
by Suresh Menon

      It was said of the great Ranji as he charmed English crowds with Oriental magic that he "never played a Christian stroke in his life." In Gwalior, Tendulkar never played an un-Christian stroke as he made 200, and that is nearly as significant as the record itself.

      A double century in a one-day international was a milestone whose time had come. The possibilities of attacking batsmanship in a limited overs game had been demonstrated in two Twenty20 World Cups and the annual IPL tournaments. There were enough centuries in 20-over games to suggest that a double in a 50-over match was just round the corner.

      The favourites to get there first were Adam Gilchrist and Virender Sehwag. A decade ago, it was Sachin Tendulkar. It needed to be an opening batsman (or a number three) guaranteed to last 50 overs and with a range of unorthodox strokes that would enable him to score consistently.

      And yet, when it came, the double was a triumph of traditional cricket and the coaching manual rather than a paean to the somewhat manic hitting of the shorter formats. Tendulkar, who has sanctified a few unorthodox shots of his own, hardly played any of the manufactured shots of today - the reverse sweep, the switch hit, the upper cut, the Dilshan scoop. The cover drive, the on drive, the flick, the leg glance, the square cut - it was all classical batsmanship.

      In a few weeks, Tendulkar will be 37. Over the years various parts of his body have protested in various ways, and he has had to adapt his game so the pain would be bearable. He has had to return to the shelf some of the innovative shots that put excessive pressure on his back. Yet here he was, against one of the best bowling attacks in the game, hitting with a ferocity and a consistency that make grown men weep. And running singles with the enthusiasm of a fresher. If this is the twilight of a great career, then nighttime is a long way off.

      What is his secret? Sehwag put his finger on it. "Sachin still practises more than anybody else," he told an interviewer. After 166 Tests, 442 one-dayers, 93 centuries and 30,000 runs? Even those kissed by the gods have to train like humans.

      There is a symmetry about the best batsman making the highest score that is not very difficult to understand. It satisfies our craving for harmony, it caters to our need for seeing things put in their right places. It stills the discomfort of seeing a journeyman rule over all-time greats. That is one reason that Tendulkar's double is so befitting. He is the greatest to have played the game.

      One-day cricket has often failed to put the best batsman at the top. Before Tendulkar, there was Viv Richards; his 189 not out was scored a quarter century ago. Previous record-holders include Dennis Amiss, David Lloyd and Glenn Turner, hardly the first names to come to mind when one-day cricket is discussed. Tendulkar restores appropriateness to an important record.

      It has taken 40 years for the first double century. But the curious thing in sport is that once a barrier is crossed, then it is done by more people more often, leaving everyone to wonder what the fuss was all about.

      Tendulkar has shown that the one-day 200 is no longer a dream. Cricket's conceit is that it does not chase records, such things are merely by-products. Yet batsmen know they can do it now. The record will be broken, but Tendulkar, like Edmund Hillary in another context, will always be remembered as the man who got there first.

http://www.espnstar.com/opinion/columnists/column/item61775/
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Re: Mumbai ka don kaun ? Sachin Sachin!!!!
« Reply #68 on: March 01, 2010, 04:02:38 PM »
An incredible journey
Thursday 25th February 2010
by R Mohan


We doff our hats to the Little Master whose insatiable appetite for the game matches his limitless capacity to reinvent himself. It seems miraculous that even as he sets his sights higher and higher, he is still able to achieve his goals. This only makes us wonder whether he is really only a couple of months away from his 37th birthday?

A world record ODI double hundred might seem the work of an inspired young man just short of his 30th birthday, which is about the age everyone believes a batsman is at the peak of his mental and physical prowess. Sachin may have aged beyond the mid-30s but there is no telling which other peaks he will scale in the game before he quits.

The innings that fetched him his latest world record was, however, not that of a young man frenetically clobbering the bowling in a limited-overs situation. There was majesty in the thought process behind the compiling of the innings that only a senior pro could bring about. Initially, the strokes flowed logically from calm thinking, silken touch more than power sending the ball scooting to the ropes.

The first impression I had from the opening over was it was a 350-run pitch. By merely tapping the ball into gaps after allowing the ball to come on to the bat Sachin showed how quickly he had assessed the conditions. Only the young and the hot-blooded would have tried to hit the cover off the ball when it was coming on so invitingly off a good pitch on a fast outfield and to short boundaries.

There was a supreme economy of effort to the early strokes that paid its own rich tribute to the form that Sachin is in this season. In fact, this rich lode of form has been his since the tri-series in Australia in 2008 from when he has had only one poor series, which was the one in Sri Lanka last year. That was when critics, pretty unfairly one must say, were beginning to murmur about him on the count of his age, etc.

There has never been any doubt over the fact that it was not the chronological counting of years that would guide Sachin in the matter of retirement when he finally does give it a thought. I believe he will call it a day when his mind runs dry of motivation. His physical reflexes and his thought processes controlling his batting are so much at their peak that they are unlikely to let him down in the near future.

Maybe, he will struggle between the wickets as he did in turning for the second that actually took him past the existing record of 194 shared by Saeed Anwar, who used a runner for a major part of his innings, and Charles Coventry of Zimbabwe. But the sheer enthusiasm for the job carries him pas that line most of the time, but only narrowly as it did once when the double century was close enough at hand to make onlookers nervous.

The fact that he was in a far emotional state when he acknowledged the cheers for his 200 than when he reached 195 showed which landmark in his mind was the more significant. For those who have harped on Sachin being a chaser of records just for their sake should please note that. Sure, the double century is also a record. But, much more than a record, it represents a signal achievement that has done a nation proud.

We will never cease to wonder from where he derives his inspiration to keep producing quality cricket day in and day out. But then would we not say the same of all great sportsmen? In Sachin's case, it has been an incredible 21-year journey, which perhaps makes him stand out even more as he nestles with the true giants of the game.

 http://www.espnstar.com/opinion/columnists/column/item61776/
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Re: Mumbai ka don kaun ? Sachin Sachin!!!!
« Reply #69 on: March 02, 2010, 02:02:04 PM »
Why Tendulkar will hit another 57 Test centuries
   
The moustache has it: as his facial hair bloomed, so did Graham Gooch’s average © Getty Images
 

Hello Confectionery Stallers. I have been busily mining some Tendulkar statistics for you, only to find that I had been beaten to it by Cricinfo’s Caesar Of Statistics, S Rajesh, in this as-always illuminating piece on the Mumbai Marvel’s recent renaissance.

This reached a stunning peak with his historic one-day double-hundred in Gwalior last week – a useful innings in anyone’s book, in which he scored as many hundreds as England have managed in their last 23 one-day internationals over 15 months (and more double-hundreds than everyone on the planet had managed in the previous 51,478 one-day international innings).

So I had to excavate deeper in the seam of statistics with some special industrial stat-mining equipment, which I drilled directly through my computer screen until some numbers splurted out.

As he reached 200, Tendulkar passed the 31,054 international runs landmark. Narrowly – he’s now on 31,055, which is more than 6000 ahead of second-placed Ricky Ponting, and 31,055 more than the entire Zaltzman family combined. He also extended his lead at the top of the international centuries chart to 25 (he has 93 to Ponting’s trifling 68; next come Lara on 53 and Kallis on 50, with all Zaltzmans lagging behind morosely on 0; and no one else has even scored half as many as Tendulkar).

History suggests that the records will keep tumbling. They are now mostly his own records – Tendulkar can barely breathe without breaking some kind of world best. In fact, he literally cannot breathe without breaking a record – with 609 international appearances under his golden belt, he has, one assumes, breathed more often on an international cricket field that any other cricketer. (With the possible exception of England legend and notorious oxygen fan Herbert Sutcliffe, also known as “Hyperventilating Herbert”, who averaged around 200 breaths per minute throughout his Test career. The story goes that Sutcliffe believed that rapid breathing conveyed a sense of nervousness through the arms into the wood of the bat, making the blade tense up, and thus hit the ball further.) (The contents of the previous parenthesis are not entirely true.)

Tendulkar is now approaching his 37th birthday, meaning he will have 10 fewer candles on his cake this year than Test hundreds on his CV. As soon as Graham Gooch turned 37 in July 1990, he promptly smashed 333 against India at Lord’s, in the infant Tendulkar’s first Test in England, in which he took a catch from another universe to dismiss Allan Lamb.

Before that innings, Gooch had averaged 37 and scored just nine hundreds in 78 Tests, punctuated by periods of poor form, technical imperfections, bans, self-imposed exile, and nagging doubts over exactly how bushy his moustache should be. After reconciling himself that it should be, and remain, “very bushy”, Gooch had an extended late blooming, averaging 51 over 40 Tests, with 11 more centuries.

So, using mathematics, the deceitful she-devil, if Tendulkar achieves proportionately an identical improvement after his 37th birthday to Gooch’s, he will over the remainder of his career play 85 more Tests, and hit 57 more Test centuries whilst averaging 75. Beware, bowlers of the world, the best may be yet to come. If Graham Gooch proves to be a scientifically accurate predictor for how batsmen perform after the age of 37. And if Tendulkar is prepared to grow his whiskers.

The delight all cricket fans must feel at Tendulkar catapulting himself back to the summit of the game is enhanced by the extent and duration of his mid-career slump. I would argue that it extended way beyond even the two-year 2005-06 period Mr Rajesh details. Over half a decade − from the start of India’s disastrous two-Test humiliation in New Zealand in December 2002, to the beginning of the 2007-08 series in Australia – if you exclude two boot-filling short series against Bangladesh, Tendulkar averaged just 38.49 in 35 Tests. The cricketing immortal was rubbing statistical shoulders with the likes of Asanka Gurusinha and Craig MacMillan.

If we discount all Tests against the average-camouflagingly weak Bangladesh and Zimbabwe, Tendulkar had the 45th best Test batting average during this period (including only batsmen who played in 10 or more Tests). Here’s proof.

He scored only three centuries against the older Test nations – two of which came in successive Tests early in 2004, when he scored 241 not out and 60 not out in Sydney, then 194 not out in Multan. Either side of that short but floridly purple patch, the little master’s Bangladesh-excluding average over five whole years was an almost Ramprakashistic, sub-Azhar-Mahmoodian 29.

Tendulkar was aged between 29 and 34 during this underachieving span, an age when batsmen are generally thought to be at their peak.

(Here’s a little statistical teaser for you that my mining equipment chunked out from the cricket earth’s molten statistical core. What age is the highest-averaging age for Test batsmen? Take a guess, write it down, seal it in an envelope, hide it under your pillow, and wait for the answer to be revealed in this week’s World Cricket Podcast. If your answer is correct, you win this week’s star prize – the everlasting respect of the cricketing universe.)

Brian Lara had a similar career trough. After his stellar early years, culminating in a massive series in England in 1995, Lara averaged just 40 over six years between the ages of 26 and 32, before exploding back into greatness in Sri Lanka in 2001-02.

In this time, the Trinidad Trailblazer averaged over 50 in just two series out of 12 – a century-free rubber of steady scoring against England early in 1998, and his flabbergastingly brilliant single-handed demolition of McGrath, Gillespie, Warne and MacGill a year later. In the rest of his career he topped 50 in 15 of his 23 series.

How curious that the two greatest batsmen of their era should both have slumped significantly over a prolonged period during what should have been their best years, before resurging when they might have been expected to decline. Tendulkar’s elbow operation in May 2005 lies exactly in the middle of his five-year funk, and must be the major explanation for his temporary relapse into relative cricketing humdrummery, given the perfection of his technique and the equanimity of his temperament. Brian Lara’s slump can be attributed to the fact that he was Brian Lara.

These numerical rift valleys in otherwise Himalayan careers are perhaps bizarre anomalies, but not without precedent in the world of geniuses. Beethoven once spent five years writing nothing but advertising jingles for a horse insurance firm, French sculpture whiz Auguste Rodin locked himself away in a studio for the entire 1890s, and emerged having made a single papier-mache Mickey Mouse, and Shakespeare wrote As You Like It (my view of which may have been clouded by having it force-rammed down my throat as an A-level set text) (but only slightly clouded).

The answer to the highest-averaging age question, and related fascinations, will be revealed in this week’s World Cricket Podcast, which will also address issues ranging from England’s tour of Bangladesh, Australia’s jaunt to New Zealand, and the history of the appeal. Plus the latest in the completely unmissable Annoying Things About Cricket series. And some other stuff, if I think of it. And maybe an interview.

http://blogs.cricinfo.com/andyzaltzman/archives/2010/03/why_tendulkar_will_hit_another.php
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Re: Mumbai ka don kaun ? Sachin Sachin!!!!
« Reply #70 on: March 02, 2010, 02:39:33 PM »
Lankan media joins chorus of appreciation for Tendulkar
PTI, Feb 27, 2010, 03.24pm IST

COLOMBO: Much like their counterparts in other cricket-playing nations, the Sri Lankan media too bowed in appreciation for Sachin Tendulkar, lauding his historic and awe-inspiring double ton in the Gwalior ODI.

Calling him a "batting god", editorials lavished praise on Tendulkar who became the first batsman in the history of one-day cricket to score a double hundred when he struck 200 not out against South Africa.

"Sachin Tendulkar quenched the thirst of millions by his record breaking double century in ODIs," said a report.

The state-owned 'Daily News' devoted a voluminous article on the Indian and wrote, "It has been said and accepted that in India cricket is religion and Tendulkar god. And that belief came true when the batting god delivered in making the first double hundred in the history of one-day international cricket."

"At 36 years of age, he does not seem to have slowed. Like all great batsmen do, he first got his eye in, got a feel of how the wicket was playing, its bounce and movement and then began the batting show of the shows.

"A show that will stay etched in the memory of those fortunate to watch it live and listen on radio," the article said.

"He was a natural and a genius. Strokes come naturally to him and he is no slogger, but a batting maestro in the manner born," the newspaper added.

The newspaper said Tendulkar's stamina during the knock was laudable.

"He is 36 and like good wine seems to be mellowing with age. In this big innings he did not show any tiredness or cramps," the newspaper said in its article.

"He ran the singles and the twos like a teenager. We wish Sachin Ramesh Tendulkar many more years of runs full of cricket and may many more records dot his glistening career until he decides to call it a day. He's an example," the article said.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/sports/cricket/series-tournaments/sachin-tendulkar-immortal-at-200/Lankan-media-joins-chorus-of-appreciation-for-Tendulkar/articleshow/5624056.cms
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Re: Mumbai ka don kaun ? Sachin Sachin!!!!
« Reply #71 on: March 02, 2010, 02:56:27 PM »
Tendulkar's mileage, and the woman who beat him

The distance Sachin has run between wickets, the highest List A scores, most balls faced in ODIs, and the paw-word

Steven Lynch

March 2, 2010

16 Dec: Australia v Netherlands, CricInfo Women's World Cup match played at Lincoln Green
Belinda Clark got a double in ODIs in 1997 © Cricinfo Ltd



How many miles or kilometres has Sachin Tendulkar run between the wickets in his international career?
asked Sundar from India

After his amazing double-century onslaught in Gwalior - and how appropriate it was that he was the first man to reach the 200 barrier in a format where he heads the run-scoring lists by such a long way - Sachin Tendulkar had scored 31,055 runs in international cricket (13,447 in Tests, 17,598 in ODIs, and 10 in Twenty20 internationals). Of those, 16,140 have come in boundaries (3675 fours and 240 sixes), so he has had to run 14,915 of his own runs in singles, twos and threes, which adds up to 328,130 yards or over 186 miles (300 kilometres). He will also have covered a similar distance for his partners while non-striker - not quite so many runs, perhaps, but a significant number nonetheless. If we allow his batting partners 75% of Tendulkar's output, that's another 12,105 runs, or 266,310 yards, or 151 miles (243km). That makes a total of around 337 miles (543km). There will also have been many byes and leg-byes, lots of runs completed before the ball crossed the boundary line - and even partial runs during run-outs, so it's impossible to calculate it any more exactly!


Was Tendulkar's score the highest in any senior limited-overs match (not just a one-day international?
asked Surinder Nayyar from Ahmedabad

Sachin Tendulkar's 200 not out in Gwalior was actually the 10th double-century in senior limited-overs cricket (now usually called "List A" matches). Two of them have been scored by Alistair Brown, the electric Surrey (now Nottinghamshire) batsman who had a surprisingly short England career of just 16 ODIs. Those included the highest List A score yet recorded: an astonishing 268 - from 160 balls, with 30 fours and 12 sixes - in Surrey's C&G Trophy match against Glamorgan at The Oval in June 2002.

Sachin "Two-Tondulkar" faced 147 deliveries during his record-breaking innings. Was this the highest number of balls faced by a batsman in a 50-over one-day international?
asked Rahul Bagree from India

In early one-day internationals innings were usually limited to a maximum of 60 overs (and often 55 in England), so it's not surprising that, overall, the six longest individual innings in ODIs come from those days: the leader is New Zealand's Glenn Turner, whose 171 not out against East Africa at Edgbaston during the first World Cup in 1975 occupied 201 balls. Another Turner innings from that World Cup - his 177-ball 114 not out against India at Old Trafford - lies second on this list. The longest individual innings in any 50-over ODI was one of 172 balls, by Canada's Ashish Bagai, who made 137 not out against Scotland in Nairobi in 2006-07. The longest in a match between two Test-playing nations was 168 balls, by David Boon, during his 102 not out for Australia against New Zealand in Hobart in 1991-92. For the full list of the longest individual ODI innings (irrespective of over limit), click here.

Sachin Tendulkar was the first man to score a double-century in a one-day international, but my sister insists that a woman achieved this feat first, more than a decade ago. Is she right? asked Keith D'Souza

Hats off to your sister, as she remembered that Australia's Belinda Clark hammered 229 not out against Denmark in Mumbai during the 1997-98 women's World Cup. It was a bit of a mismatch: after scoring 412 for 3 in their 50 overs, the Aussies bowled Denmark out for 49


Steven Lynch is the editor of the Cricinfo Guide to International Cricket. If you want to ask Steven a question, use our feedback form. The most interesting questions will be answered here each week.

http://www.cricinfo.com/magazine/content/story/449574.html
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adhunikbarbarian

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Re: Mumbai ka don kaun ? Sachin Sachin!!!!
« Reply #72 on: March 05, 2010, 12:32:37 PM »
With all due regards to everyone and i might like to add that i dont have anything against SACHIN or for that matter his 200*, aren't we making a mountain out of a mole hill if thats the correct expression for the same. I mean it was just another random event. With subcontinent pitches playing to the tunes of the batsmen wasnt this inevitable in due course of time. We have quite a few 350 plus scores in the ODI history of subcontinent matches. To me it seems it was just a matter of time that someone capitalized on the opportunity and added a double ton in ODI to their credit. Just that Sachin happened to be at the right place at the right time. This might offend some people here but like i said its my point of view. No doubt it was a fine knock, in fact a classic knock. But i stand on my point, just another random knock.

ALL SAID AND DONE "SACH IS LIFE :D"
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Re: Mumbai ka don kaun ? Sachin Sachin!!!!
« Reply #73 on: March 05, 2010, 12:54:41 PM »
PEOPLE WAKE UP TO BELINDA CLARKE.....michael clarke ki rishtay daar hain kya yeh maadam????
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Re: Mumbai ka don kaun ? Sachin Sachin!!!!
« Reply #74 on: March 05, 2010, 01:24:45 PM »
With all due regards to everyone and i might like to add that i dont have anything against SACHIN or for that matter his 200*, aren't we making a mountain out of a mole hill if thats the correct expression for the same. I mean it was just another random event. With subcontinent pitches playing to the tunes of the batsmen wasnt this inevitable in due course of time. We have quite a few 350 plus scores in the ODI history of subcontinent matches. To me it seems it was just a matter of time that someone capitalized on the opportunity and added a double ton in ODI to their credit. Just that Sachin happened to be at the right place at the right time. This might offend some people here but like i said its my point of view. No doubt it was a fine knock, in fact a classic knock. But i stand on my point, just another random knock.

ALL SAID AND DONE "SACH IS LIFE :D"

AK's 10 wicket in one inning/Lara WC / Olympic 100mt WC  - I am sure all these are just random incidents
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Cover Point

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Re: Mumbai ka don kaun ? Sachin Sachin!!!!
« Reply #75 on: March 05, 2010, 01:42:58 PM »
PEOPLE WAKE UP TO BELINDA CLARKE.....michael clarke ki rishtay daar hain kya yeh maadam????

welcome to CricketVoice. Please contribute more.
« Last Edit: March 05, 2010, 05:44:59 PM by Cover Point »
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Blwe_torch

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Re: Mumbai ka don kaun ? Sachin Sachin!!!!
« Reply #76 on: March 05, 2010, 03:46:04 PM »
PEOPLE WAKE UP TO BELINDA CLARKE.....michael clarke ki rishtay daar hain kya yeh maadam????

welcome to CricketVoice. Please contibute me.


Arre...plz don't start begging immediately.............he is just a new-comer, let him settle down!  :icon_jokercolor::icon_jokercolor:
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Blwe_torch

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Re: Mumbai ka don kaun ? Sachin Sachin!!!!
« Reply #77 on: March 05, 2010, 03:47:38 PM »
With all due regards to everyone and i might like to add that i dont have anything against SACHIN or for that matter his 200*, aren't we making a mountain out of a mole hill if thats the correct expression for the same. I mean it was just another random event. With subcontinent pitches playing to the tunes of the batsmen wasnt this inevitable in due course of time. We have quite a few 350 plus scores in the ODI history of subcontinent matches. To me it seems it was just a matter of time that someone capitalized on the opportunity and added a double ton in ODI to their credit. Just that Sachin happened to be at the right place at the right time. This might offend some people here but like i said its my point of view. No doubt it was a fine knock, in fact a classic knock. But i stand on my point, just another random knock.

ALL SAID AND DONE "SACH IS LIFE :D"

Arre....all the big-scores have happened on flat, batting tracks and against weak bowling attack. SRT did it against SA,........which is one of the strongest bowling attacks.
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Re: Mumbai ka don kaun ? Sachin Sachin!!!!
« Reply #78 on: March 05, 2010, 04:19:08 PM »
cant they be random events ??? and as for me being a newcomer to cricketvoice that i am....bolt random, lara 400 random...all i am saying is that in the near future maybe someone scores a 250 in an ODI...what then? or maybe the 100m in under 8 seconds as someone(cricinfo) pointed out...had they not happened today what would your remarks have been???
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The constraint of a multiplied meaning liberates that world from the control of form.

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Re: Mumbai ka don kaun ? Sachin Sachin!!!!
« Reply #79 on: March 05, 2010, 04:51:44 PM »
Greatness remains the same across the generations..............only ppl define it differently.
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