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Feb 25, 2010

Sachin Tendulkar says record ODI score is 'breakable'

India batsman Sachin Tendulkar believes his record score of 200 not out in a one-day international is beatable.

Tendulkar, 36, became the first player to hit a double century in a 50-over international in India's victory over South Africa in Gwalior on Wednesday.

"No record is unbreakable. But I would be happy if an Indian breaks my record," he said.

"I do not play for records. I enjoy my cricket and I play with passion. I have done this for 20 years."

Pakistan's Saeed Anwar and Zimbabwe's Charles Coventry held the previous record of the highest individual score in an ODI with 194 before Tendulkar's innings.

The Indian legend reached 200 in the final over of his side's innings and he achieved it off 147 balls.

"I knew I would get my chance in the over," said Tendulkar. "I will remember this innings. But I will not compare it with my other efforts."

He added: "I do not play for records. I enjoy my cricket and I play with passion. I have done this for 20 years.

"I thought about the 200 mark for the first time when I was probably 175-plus and only 42 overs had been bowled.

"I felt I had a chance, but I didn't think of it seriously until I got really close. Only then I thought there was an opportunity to be had."

Tendulkar holds the record for most runs in ODI's and Tests and is planning to continue revelling in the kind of form which helped him reach his 200 landmark.

"I'm enjoying my cricket and I'm playing the way I want to play," he said.

"I've done whatever I thought was best for the team.

"I have made a few bad decisions as a batsman, but I think as long as I know in my heart that what I think is right for the team, I'm going to do just that."

Sachin Tendulkar Congratulated By Lok Sabha Over His Double Century

The greatest cricketer of the century Sachin Tendulkar who scored double century in one-day match has been congratulated by Lok Sabha.

On Thursday, Speaker Meira Kumar congratulated the cricketer on his achievement when the house assembled at 11 a.m. The speaker quoted it as a matter of national pride and the MPs thumped on their desks in the praise of the cricket icon.

Sachin Tendulkar made the record of unbeaten double century in a match against South Africa in the second one-day international (ODI) in Gwalior on Wednesday. India recorded the win of 153-run win over South Africa and took the indisputable 2-0 lead in the three-match series.

Speaker Meira Kumar said, "This is a unique achievement which is a matter of national pride and a source of inspiration for budding cricketers of this country."

"We convey our best wishes to Sachin Tendulkar for his future endeavours," the speaker added.

The house also congratulated the Indian cricket team for its tremendous performance

Pak hockey players say Tendulkar is an 'inspiration' for them


Showering praise on little master Sachin Tendulkar for his stupendous feat of hitting the first ever double century in a limited over match, Pakistani hockey players, who are currently in India to participate in the Hockey World Cup, have said they derive inspiration from the champion batsman.

"I saw the match since I had nothing to do after our practice session. We all clapped after he scored 200. Cricket has never seen a player like him and will never see," said Rehan Butt, who himself is a top class forward player.

"Even after playing for 20 years, his passion for the game is an inspiration for us," The Daily Times quoted star drag-flicker Sohail Abbas, as saying.

During his massive innings of 200 not out (147 balls) against South Africa in the second ODI at Gwalior on Wednesday, Tendulkar hit 25 fours and three sixes.

The previous record of highest individual runs in an ODI was held by Pakistani opener Saeed Anwar (194 runs).

Tendulkar greatest batsman I have seen: Clarke

Australia's Twenty20 captain Michael Clarke rates Sachin Tendulkar is the best batsman he has ever seen and said he is not really surprised to see the iconic Indian smashing the first double century in the history of One-day cricket.

"His record speaks for itself. I can't say I'm surprised," said Clarke, who is here for Australian team's tour of New Zealand.

"He's probably the greatest batsman I've ever seen play, live," Clarke was quoted as saying by the Australian Associated Press (AAP).

Tendulkar's unbeaten 200 at Gwalior was a batting master class that flattened South Africa and India won by 153 runs to take an unassailable 2-0 lead in the three-match series.

"I didn't watch any of it but I'd like to get back this afternoon and see some highlights," said Clarke, ahead of Australia's first Twenty20 match against New Zealand.

Clarke was particularly impressed with Tendulkar's longevity and said cricket was blessed to have such a genius.

"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.

"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," he added.

Nasser Hussain: Mighty Sachin Tendulkar even tops Lara, Ponting and The Don Bradman!

I have never liked comparisons between great players, but after Wednesday’s incredible game it must be said — Sachin Tendulkar is the greatest batsman of all time.

Better than Brian Lara and Ricky Ponting, the other two great players of my era. Better than Sir Viv Richards, Sunil Gavaskar and Allan Border. And I would even say better than Sir Don Bradman himself.

Now he has the first double hundred in a one-day international — hitting 25 fours and three sixes as India beat South Africa by 153 runs — he has swung it for me.

I played against Tendulkar on my first England tour, the Nehru Cup in India in 1989, and I could still see that excited boy in big pads in Gwalior.

That extraordinary drive and enthusiasm are what make Tendulkar so special. He has been playing international cricket for 20 years under the intense scrutiny being an Indian superstar brings, so it is remarkable he still loves holding a bat as much as ever.

Halfway through the Indian innings on Wednesday, Tendulkar was already on more than a hundred. It’s almost a given that he will reach three figures. But even he had not turned it into a double in a 50-over international before, and this was not against a lowly side but South Africa, one of the most formidable bowling attacks in the world.

There was no slogging — just pure, attacking strokeplay.

Tendulkar has gone back to being the fluent, almost flamboyant, batsman he used to be. In recent years his innings had become a bit mechanical, but I think he has remembered what made him great.

I interviewed Sachin for Sportsmail when he was touring England a couple of years ago — one of the highlights of my career since I stopped playing, and it was noticeable that he is not driven by money.

He has become a very wealthy man, but that has been as a result of doing what he does best and enjoying it. It has not been the be all and end all for him.

What else is left for Tendulkar now? Well, it is sometimes said that he has not played enough match-winning innings on the really big occasion for India.

What better, then, than to score a hundred in the World Cup final against Australia — or maybe even England — on home soil this time next year.

That would be the full stop that would enable Tendulkar to ride off into the sunset with everything achieved in his career.

My admiration for him is total. To steal the nickname of a certain football coach who led Inter Milan against Chelsea on Wednesday, Sachin Tendulkar truly is The Special One.

Sachin Tendulkar 200 Runs: ODI History Re-Written

Sachin Tendulkar, the greatest batsman ever, created history on 24 feb 2010 when he made the highest one day international score, in the process also making a double century...

While most teams struggle to make 200 odd runs in 50 overs, Sachin Tendulkar showed that he could do it alone, and indeed in a dramatic fashion posted a personal score of 200* not out, helping India to go past the 400 run mark, and consequently win the second ODI against South Africa on Wednesday. In spite of being in the team for almost 20 years, with this innings Sachin has showed that the desire to be the best and play for the country has not diminished one bit. Read more on Sachin Tendulkar, the Master Blaster.

The first double century in ODIs comes after almost 40 years of ODIs being played, including the 60 overs a side matches that were played in the earlier days. These 60 over matches were naturally a batsman's delight as it provided more opportunities to score runs. In spite of that, no one, not one batsman could reach the elusive and highly coveted double century. The closest to come to the 200 run mark was Charles Coventry, from Zimbabwe, who scored 194 not out, eclipsing the record of Saeed Anwar, who had also scored 194, but 'Was Out'. Saeed Anwar's record of 194 stood for 12 long years, and while many great batsman came close to breaking it, no one ever managed it. In fact, the Little Master himself came close once, but ended up being 186 not out. It took a Zimbabwean to break the highest ODI score record, and that came in a match against minnows Bangladesh. Sachin, on the other hand, took the best bowling attack in the world apart, and scored at a phenomenal strike rate of well over hundred. His double ton came in only 147 balls, ensuring that his strike rate was also the 'Best of the Three'.

Records have come naturally to Tendulkar and now only Lara's 400 in test eludes him. But with the way he has been batting of late, this record might also end up being his. And while people may argue that he has not much time left, statistics show that Tendulkar is batting better than ever. A few headlines were even screaming 'Second Coming of Tendulkar', and his innings of 200, with 25 boundaries and 3 sixes, is a testament to this. With 4 tons in the last 4 tests, and his highest 3 ODI scores coming in the last 12 months, Sachin has moved to a higher gear, and this just when the cricketing world thought he was in top gear already.

Tendulkar's 200 not out is undoubtedly the highlight of his career, and what a career he has. Or is having. He is the highest run scorer in both test and ODIs, and has the highest centuries in both tests and ODIs, has scored more than 30000 runs in international cricket, and Sachin's career is far from over.

With impeccable and stupendous batting, his effort in the field too cannot go unnoticed. The famous dive to save a boundary in the first ODI shows Tendulkar's commitment to the game, a game he has been in for 20 years, a game that his records have written and sculpted, a game where his name is compared to God, a game that more than a billion of his countrymen watch, a game where every Indian prays for Tendulkar to score, and score big, a game called CRICKET. And Sachin Ramesh Tendulkar, even at 37 years of age, will simply not let them down.

Sachin Tendulkar. A salute to the best batsman in the game. Period.

Feb 24, 2010

Sachin becomes first batsman to score 200 in an ODI

Milestone man Sachin Tendulkar re-wrote the record books on 24 feb 2010, hammering the first double century in the history of one-day cricket to add another feather to his well-adorned cap.

The capacity crowd at the Captain Roop Singh Stadium witnessed history on Wednesday as Tendulkar, statistically the greatest batsman the game has ever seen, pushed a Charl Langeveldt delivery through the off-side and ran a single to achieve a feat which no other cricketer has achieved.

One-day international cricket, since its 1971 inception, had to wait nearly four decades to see a batsman score 200. The previous best mark was shared by Zimbabwean Charles Coventry (194 not out against Bangladesh in 2009) and Pakistan's Saeed Anwar (194 against India in 1997).

As the crowd erupted with unbridled joy, Tendulkar, tired but composed, took off his helmet, looked skyward, closed his eyes to offer a silent prayer.

His captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni came down from the striker's end to shake hands and hug him.

And as Tendulkar set on his way back to the pavilion after the completion of the Indian innings, a tumultuous celebration greeted him.

The crowd gave him a standing ovation as the entire stadium erupted in euphoria while his teammates were simply ecstatic as they clapped and hugged each other, basking in the glory of their senior teammates.

Tendulkar batted like a man with a mission on Wednesday and the South African bowlers simply had no clue where to bowl.

Once he crossed the 150-mark, the crowd anticipated something special and Tendulkar did not let them down.

A six off Roelof van der Merwe took him past Kapil Dev's 175 not out and in the next over, he hit Jacques Kallis for a four to equal his previous best of 186 not out that had come against New Zealand in Hyderabad in 1999.

The crowd got restless as Tendulkar approached the 194-run mark and a couple off Wayne Parnell saw him eclipse it.

His teammates and spectators were on the edge of their seat with a double century round the corner but with Dhoni going berserk at the striker's end and facing most of the deliveries, it was an agonising wait for all.

Dhoni took singles off the final deliveries of the 47th-49th overs and Tendulkar finally took strike with four balls left in the innings.

The first ball he received from Langeveldt was steered past point and Tendulkar ran for a single to remain unbeaten after an unforgettable unbeaten 200 that came off just 147 balls with 25 fours and three sixes in it.

It was yet another milestone for the man, who has some 30,000 international runs under his belt, including 93 centuries (47 in Tests and 46 in ODIs).

No better bat to score ODI double than Sachin

Saeed Anwar stopped six short 13 years ago. Charles Coventry didn't seem worthy enough. Tendulkar was robbed of it twice last year itself. Finally, the elusive double century is for the master batsman to have, as he lashed South Africa to all parts of the Roop Singh Stadium in Gwalior on Wednesday.

Tendulkar's 46th one-day hundred was converted into a double with 25 fours and three sixes, the boundaries alone making up more than a century in his mammoth yet destructive 140-ball effort.

For the Indian batting genius with over 20 years in international cricket, records have fallen by the wayside ever since he took on opening in one-day cricket as Test records continued to break.

Feb 16, 2010

Sachin Tendulkar slams 47th Test century

Batting maestro Sachin Tendulkar hit his 47th hundred on the second day of the second Test against South Africa at Eden Gardens in Kolkata on 15 Feb 2010

Tendulkar, who holds the record of scoring highest number of centuries, played brilliant cricket with swashbuckling Virender Sehwag to dominate the second day.

This was Tendulkar's second ton against South Africa in the ongoing series and the fourth consecutive century. He had scored two centuries during the Bangladesh Test series.

Earlier, Sehwag shared a third-wicket stand of 150 with Tendulkar as India raced to 232/2 by tea.

Tendulkar was batting on 65 at tea break, with India trailing by 64 runs after bowling out the visitors for 296 in their first innings.

Tendulkar's century came soon after Virender Sehwag hit 150 as the master and the pupil continued to torment South Africa. Sehwag reached his 150 off 160 balls and his knock was studded with 21 fours and two sixes.

The Tendulkar-Sehwag partnership enabled India to take the lead over the Proteas.

For sachin this is the 4th consecutive test hundred also crossed 6,000 test runs in india.

Feb 10, 2010

Despite Tendulkar India hurtles to big loss

Neither Sachin Tendulkar’s 46th century nor the lower-order’s spirited resistance could keep India from an innings defeat in the first Test against South Africa here at the VCA Stadium.

Tendulkar (100) batted with uncommon mastery on a wearing fourth-day surface, a surface so slow it prompted captain South African Graeme Smith to station his catchers in front of the wicket during several phases of play.

The end was imminent after Tendulkar’s departure. But Wriddhiman Saha (36), Harbhajan Singh (39), and Zaheer Khan (33) did their bit to extend the contest. Eventually the discipline of South Africa’s bowling and the magnitude of the touring side’s lead proved too much.

Fittingly Dale Steyn took the last wicket, his 10th of the match, as South Africa completed an innings-and-six-run win for a 1-0 lead in the two-Test series. It was M.S. Dhoni’s first defeat as captain in 12 Tests.

Outplayed, India will have to win the second Test, scheduled in Kolkata from February 14, if it is to retain its No. 1 ranking.

A swift turnaround is required. But there is time yet for such analysis; the immediate need is an account of Tuesday’s events.

Much of day four saw Tendulkar and Steyn locked in battle. The thrust and parry between a fast-bowler at his peak and a great batsman is among the most engaging spectacles in cricket: not only is it visually rewarding, featuring as it does impossibly complex activities compressed in the briefest of moments, but it also satisfies the mysterious desire for razor-edged conflict between equally matched champions.

Steyn won a round by bringing a ball in to Tendulkar, using the angle of his release and a scrambled seam for this purpose rather than the conventional in-swinger.

Tendulkar watched the ball till late, but unable to determine its designs, couldn’t decide between playing it and leaving it; fortunately for the great batsman, the ball brushed the front pad, positioned outside off-stump’s line, and missed the rapidly but belatedly descending bat.

Tendulkar responded with a flicked two. Steyn nearly obtained a return catch with one that the pitch held up before forcing Tendulkar to sway away from a short delivery that bounced wickedly low. Steyn then served up a rare bad ball, both short and wide, and Tendulkar rolled his wrists on the cut, cuffing the ball.

In the next over, Tendulkar masterfully turned to the square-leg fence a delivery on middle stump which had begun to shape away.

Another joust


Roughly half way into the middle session, Tendulkar and Steyn had another joust, the bowler armed this time with reverse swing. Offered width, Tendulkar dabbed the bowler to the third-man boundary to move into the 90s, but was then beaten by a rapid in-ducker. Steyn appealed for a leg-before decision; the ball had swung too much.

In between these contests, Tendulkar dealt adroitly with the other challenges South Africa’s bowlers presented. Paul Harris’s left-arm over, directed into the rough, and Wayne Parnell’s slight away-swing from left-arm around (the ball swinging with the shine) posed problems.

Tendulkar waited for Harris to drop his length, seeking to pull, but he had more success with an on-drive, front foot leading the stroke.

Parnell, who bowled a troubling spell just before lunch, won an edge from Tendulkar on 45. It travelled fast and low to Jacques Kallis’s right at first slip, and was put down.

Tendulkar also endured a few anxious moments on 99 against Parnell, who bowled a wide, denying line to keep the great man from finding a run. But after reaching his hundred Tendulkar fell — in mildly bizarre circumstances and against the run of play,

Tendulkar went on bent knee to sweep Harris, as he had done to a degree of safety earlier, but found to his horror the ball cannoning off pad and arm onto the stumps. With Tendulkar went India’s chances, however remote they may have been, of saving the match.

A measure of Tendulkar’s influence on the day and the ease with which he batted may be had from the first session, in which he made 62 of India’s 96 runs.

Unfortunately for India, none of the other batsmen emulated Tendulkar’s skill and patience. M. Vijay (32) helped Tendulkar raise 72, and after Vijay and S. Badrinath exited — the former top-edged a sweep to fine-leg, the latter thrust his bat at a Parnell delivery that left him to be caught behind — Dhoni joined Tendulkar for a partnership of 70.

But saving a match demands much more; it demands epic partnerships — and with Rahul Dravid and V.V.S. Laxman indisposed and Gautam Gambhir having a rare lean match, India was stripped of the services of three men eminently capable of such feats.

SCOREBOARD

South Africa — 1st innings: 558 for six decl.

India — 1st innings: 233

India — 2nd innings: G. Gambhir b Morkel 1 (3b), V. Sehwag c Smith b Steyn 16 (19b, 3x4), M. Vijay c Morkel b Harris 32 (90b, 4x4), S. Tendulkar b Harris 100 (179b, 13x4), S. Badrinath c Boucher b Parnell 6 (31b, 1x4), M.S. Dhoni c de Villiers b Harris 25 (112b, 3x4), W. Saha lbw b Steyn 36 (101b, 4x4), Harbhajan lbw b Parnell 39 (39b, 6x4, 1x6), Zaheer c Harris b Kallis 33 (57b, 4x4, 2x6), A. Mishra b Steyn 0 (3b), Ishant (not out) 0 (11b); Extras (b-15, lb-8, nb-2, w-6): 31. Total (in 107.1 overs): 319.

Fall of wickets: 1-1 (Gambhir), 2-24 (Sehwag), 3-96 (Vijay), 4-122 (Badrinath), 5-192 (Tendulkar), 6-209 (Dhoni), 7-259 (Harbhajan), 8-318 (Zaheer), 9-318 (Steyn).

South Africa bowling: Steyn 18.1-1-57-3, Morkel 21-6-65-1, Parnell 13-2-58-2, Harris 38-17-76-3, Kallis 12-3-19-1, Duminy 5-0-21-0.

Tendulkar's second innings tons

In the nineties, when Sachin Tendulkar was initially talked about as one of the contenders to be the world's best batsman, Indian cricket fans had a byword - "If Tendulkar scores a century, India wins the match."

That, however, was not strictly true. In fact, some of Tendulkar's most memorable centuries have come in losing causes. And in the first Test against South Africa, he once again scored a century in a losing cause.

Most of Tendulkar's centuries have been scored in the team's first innings and only 12 of his 46 Test hundreds have come in the second innings. Of these 12, India have won 3 matches, lost 4 and drawn 5.

Tendulkar's 2nd Innings 100s in Indian wins
Score Match Innings Opposition Venue Date
104* 3 Sri Lanka Colombo (SSC) 27-Jul-93
155* 3 Australia Chennai 06-Mar-98
103* 4 England Chennai 11-Dec-08


Tendulkar's 2nd Innings 100s in Indian defeats
Score Match Innings Opposition Venue Date
122 3 England Birmingham 06-Jun-96
113 3 New Zealand Wellington 26-Dec-98
136 4 Pakistan Chennai 28-Jan-99
100 3 South Africa Nagpur 06-Feb-10


Tendulkar's 2nd Innings 100s in drawn matches

Score Match Innings Opposition Venue Date
119* 4 England Manchester 09-Aug-90
124* 3 Sri Lanka Colombo (SSC) 24-Feb-99
126* 3 New Zealand Mohali 10-Oct-99
176 3 West Indies Kolkata 30-Oct-02
100* 3 Sri Lanka Ahmedabad 16-Nov-09

It is interesting to note that in the tables above, whenever Tendulkar has gotten out, it has almost uniformly led to an Indian defeat. The only time he got out and India did not lose was when he made 176 against the West Indies, which incidentally is his highest score in this list.

It is reasonable to conclude then, that if Sachin Tendulkar stays for any great length of time at the crease in the team's second innings, the odds of defeat reduce drastically. And if he remains unbeaten, India almost always escape defeat.