ICC Cricket World Cup 2011 / Players / Sachin Tendulkar
Full name Sachin Ramesh Tendulkar
Born April 24, 1973, Bombay (now Mumbai), Maharashtra
Current age 40 years 27 days
Major teams India, Asia XI, Mumbai, Mumbai Indians, Yorkshire
Nickname Tendlya, Little Master
Playing role Top-order batsman
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm offbreak, Legbreak googly
Height 5 ft 5 in
Education Sharadashram Vidyamandir School
In a nutshell Perhaps the most complete batsman and the most worshipped cricketer in the world, Tendulkar holds just about every batting record worth owning in the game, including those for most runs and hundreds in Tests and ODIs, and most international runs. More
| Mat | Inns | NO | Runs | HS | Ave | BF | SR | 100 | 50 | 4s | 6s | Ct | St | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tests | 198 | 327 | 33 | 15837 | 248* | 53.86 | 51 | 67 | 69 | 115 | 0 | |||
| ODIs | 463 | 452 | 41 | 18426 | 200* | 44.83 | 21367 | 86.23 | 49 | 96 | 2016 | 195 | 140 | 0 |
| T20Is | 1 | 1 | 0 | 10 | 10 | 10.00 | 12 | 83.33 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
| First-class | 307 | 486 | 50 | 25228 | 248* | 57.86 | 81 | 114 | 186 | 0 | ||||
| List A | 551 | 538 | 55 | 21999 | 200* | 45.54 | 60 | 114 | 175 | 0 | ||||
| Twenty20 | 91 | 91 | 11 | 2727 | 100* | 34.08 | 2239 | 121.79 | 1 | 16 | 351 | 36 | 28 | 0 |
| Mat | Inns | Balls | Runs | Wkts | BBI | BBM | Ave | Econ | SR | 4w | 5w | 10 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tests | 198 | 142 | 4198 | 2461 | 45 | 3/10 | 3/14 | 54.68 | 3.51 | 93.2 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| ODIs | 463 | 270 | 8054 | 6850 | 154 | 5/32 | 5/32 | 44.48 | 5.10 | 52.2 | 4 | 2 | 0 |
| T20Is | 1 | 1 | 15 | 12 | 1 | 1/12 | 1/12 | 12.00 | 4.80 | 15.0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| First-class | 307 | 7563 | 4353 | 70 | 3/10 | 62.18 | 3.45 | 108.0 | 0 | 0 | |||
| List A | 551 | 10230 | 8478 | 201 | 5/32 | 5/32 | 42.17 | 4.97 | 50.8 | 4 | 2 | 0 | |
| Twenty20 | 91 | 8 | 93 | 123 | 2 | 1/12 | 1/12 | 61.50 | 7.93 | 46.5 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Test debut | Pakistan v India at Karachi, Nov 15-20, 1989 scorecard |
| Last Test | India v Australia at Delhi, Mar 22-24, 2013 scorecard |
| Test statistics | |
| ODI debut | Pakistan v India at Gujranwala, Dec 18, 1989 scorecard |
| Last ODI | India v Pakistan at Dhaka, Mar 18, 2012 scorecard |
| ODI statistics | |
| Only T20I | South Africa v India at Johannesburg, Dec 1, 2006 scorecard |
| T20I statistics | |
| First-class debut | 1988/89 |
| Last First-class | India v Australia at Delhi, Mar 22-24, 2013 scorecard |
| List A debut | 1989/90 |
| Last List A | India v Pakistan at Dhaka, Mar 18, 2012 scorecard |
| Twenty20 debut | South Africa v India at Johannesburg, Dec 1, 2006 scorecard |
| Last Twenty20 | Mumbai Indians v Sunrisers Hyderabad at Mumbai, May 13, 2013 scorecard |
Sachin Tendulkar has been the most complete batsman of his time, the most prolific runmaker of all time, and arguably the biggest cricket icon the game has ever known. His batting is based on the purest principles: perfect balance, economy of movement, precision in stroke-making, and that intangible quality given only to geniuses - anticipation. If he doesn't have a signature stroke - the upright, back-foot punch comes close - it is because he is equally proficient at each of the full range of orthodox shots (and plenty of improvised ones as well) and can pull them out at will.
There are no apparent weaknesses in Tendulkar's game. He can score all around the wicket, off both front foot and back, can tune his technique to suit every condition, temper his game to suit every situation, and has made runs in all parts of the world in all conditions.
Some of his finest performances have come against Australia, the overwhelmingly dominant team of his era. His century as a 19-year-old on a lightning-fast pitch at the WACA is considered one of the best innings ever to have been played in Australia. A few years later he received the ultimate compliment from the ultimate batsman: Don Bradman confided to his wife that Tendulkar reminded him of himself.
Blessed with the keenest of cricket minds, and armed with a loathing for losing, Tendulkar set about doing what it took to become one of the best batsmen in the world. His greatness was established early: he was only 16 when he made his Test debut. He was hit on the mouth by Waqar Younis but continued to bat, in a blood-soaked shirt. His first Test hundred, a match-saving one at Old Trafford, came when he was 17, and he had 16 Test hundreds before he turned 25. In 2000 he became the first batsman to have scored 50 international hundreds, in 2008 he passed Brian Lara as the leading Test run-scorer, and in the years after, he went past 13,000 Test runs 30,000 international runs, and 50 Test hundreds.
He currently holds the record for most hundreds in both Tests and ODIs - remarkable, considering he didn't score his first ODI hundred till his 79th match. Incredibly, he retains a divine enthusiasm for the game: at 36 years and 306 days he broke a 40-year-old barrier by scoring the first double-century in one-day cricket. In 2012, when just one month short of his 39th birthday, he became the first player to score 100 international centuries, which like Bradman's batting average, could be a mark that lasts for ever. Later that year, though, he announced his retirement from ODIs after a disappointing 18 months in international cricket.
Tendulkar's considerable achievements seem greater still when looked at in the light of the burden of expectations he has had to bear from his adoring but somewhat unreasonable followers, who have been prone to regard anything less than a hundred in each innings as a failure. The aura may have dimmed, if only slightly, as the years on the international circuit have taken their toll on the body, but Tendulkar remains, by a distance, the most worshipped cricketer in the world.
Sambit Bal
- Read More
Rahul Bhattacharya on Sachin Tendulkar
The cricketer seemingly emerged fully formed when he first picked up a bat. So too perhaps did the luminary
Stats analysis
He has such staggering numbers in both Tests and ODIs that it's conceivable some of those records may never be broken
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February 23-25, 1988
A monster in the making-
Sachin Tendulkar, 14, and Vinod Kambli, 16 compile a 664-run unbroken partnership for Shardashram Vidyamandir against St Xavier's at Azad Maidan. Kambli makes 349 not out, Tendulkar 326 not out. It remains the highest partnership recorded in any form of cricket, until in November 2006 two schoolboys from Hyderabad - Manoj Kumar and Mohammad Shaibaz - overtake the record with an unbeaten 721-run partnership.
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December 11, 1988
Truly first-class debut-
At 15, scores an unbeaten century against Gujarat at the Wankhede Stadium to become the youngest Indian to make a hundred on first-class debut. Was picked after Bombay captain Dilip Vengsarkar watched him negotiate Kapil Dev in the nets.
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December 14, 1989
Bloody-minded to start with-
On the last day of the last Test of his first Test series, in Sialkot, gets hit on the nose by Waqar Younis - also in his first series. Falls down, gets up, and wipes away the gushing blood. Medical assistance is declined. Is eventually out for 57.
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August 14, 1990
How young is too young?-
At 17 years and 112 days, becomes the then second-youngest centurion in Test history. His 119 not out against England at Old Trafford is a majestic rearguard action that enables India to hang on for a draw. It still remains among his most valuable Test innings.
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February 2-3, 1992
Crazy diamond-
Sculpts a counter-attacking gem of 114, after India fall from 135 for 6 to 159 for 8, at the WACA, the bounciest cricket pitch in the world. It is his favourite Test innings.
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April, 1992
Yorkshire opens up-
Becomes the first overseas signing for Yorkshire.
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November 27-28, 1992
Thousand reasons to cheer-
At 19 years and 217 days, becomes the youngest player to reach 1000 Test runs, during his 111 out of India's 227 in Johannesburg.
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February 11-12, 1993
Mad in Madras-
Scores his first Test century at home. Hits 24 fours and a six in his 165 against England, as India win by an innings and 22 runs.
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November 24, 1993
Golden arm is unveiled-
With South Africa needing six runs to win off the last over of their Hero Cup semi-final against India, bowls a sensational over, giving them just three, and India victory.
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March 27, 1994
Opens a can of worms-
Opens in an ODI for the first time - against New Zealand. Goes on to make 82 off 49 balls.
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October, 1995
Commercial worth-
Signs a five-year contract worth Rs 31.5 crore with WorldTel, which makes him the richest cricketer in the world.
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February-March, 1996
His World Cup-
With 523 runs at 87.16, is the highest scorer in the World Cup held in India, Pakistan and Sri Lanka. Scores two centuries and three half-centuries.
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August 8, 1996
Captaincy, part I-
Is named captain of the Indian team, at age 23.
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January 2, 1998
End of captaincy, part I-
Is sacked from the captaincy after a 15-month tenure during which India won three out of 17 Tests.
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February-March, 1998
His finest series-
Gets his maiden first-class double-hundred and two hundreds and a fifty in three Tests against Australia. India win the home-series 2-1.
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April 22-24, 1998
Desert Storm-
Scores two blazing, back-to-back hundreds against Australia at Sharjah to help India reach the final and then win it.
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January 30-31, 1999
His greatest innings... almost-
Makes 136 chasing 271 in Chennai against Pakistan with an injured back. Gets out with 17 runs to get; India fall short by 13.
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July 28, 1999
Captaincy, part II-
Is reappointed captain - without his consent - after India, under Mohammad Azharuddin, fail to reach the semifinals of the World Cup in England.
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March 20, 2001
A thorn in Aussie flesh-
Scores a century in a famous decider of a famous series, against Australia. India win 2-1, denying Australia the "final frontier".
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March 31, 2001
The road less traveled-
Becomes the first player to score 10,000 runs in one-day cricket in the course of his 139 against Australia in Indore.
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November 19, 2001
Ball-tampering?-
Is cautioned and fined by match referee Mike Denness for trying to "change the condition of the ball" during the Port Elizabeth Test. The resulting outcry in India and the impasse between the Indian board and the ICC leads the latter to review the jurisdiction of match referees.
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December 21, 2001
Caught out of his crease-
Is tied down by the over-the-stumps tactics of Ashley Giles in Bangalore, and is stumped for the first time in his Test career. It also highlights the start of his discomfort against left-arm spinners.
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August 22-23, 2002
Move over, Sir Don-
Overtakes Don Bradman's tally of 29 Test centuries, misses double-century by seven at Headingley, but India win by an innings and 46 runs.
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February-March, 2003
His World Cup, part II-
Scores 673 runs at 61.18 in the World Cup, taking India to within a win of the world crown. His 98 against Pakistan in an exceptionally anticipated match is one of the best knocks played by Indians at World Cups. Even though Australia are the champions, he is named the Man of the Series.
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August, 2003
Privilege, what privilege?-
Draws flak for a duty waiver on the Ferrari 360 Modena, which is gifted to him by the Fiat group on his passing Bradman's mark of 29 Test centuries. Finally offers to pay the $245,000 duty, which is covered for by Fiat.
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January2-4, 2004
Economy over style-
Scores a century without a cover-drive, goes on to get an unbeaten 241 in Sydney, and rates it the best among his centuries. Australia manage to hold on for a draw, and the series ends 1-1.
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March 28-29, 2004
Robbed of a double?-
Scores an unbeaten 194 in Sehwag's Multan Test. Later says he was surprised the Indian team declared with him so close to the double-century.
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August, 2004
Cost of playing catches up-
Tennis elbow surfaces, during the Videocon Cup in Holland. Misses the Champions Trophy in England, and then the first two home Tests against Australia.
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March 16, 2005
Ten thousand, twice over-
Becomes the fifth man to score 10,000 Test runs in course of his 52 against Pakistan in Kolkata. India win the match by 195 runs.
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May, 2005
Tennis elbow refuses to go away-
Goes for the surgery for the tennis elbow, misses a triangular in Sri Lanka, a tour to Zimbabwe, and the Super Series in Australia.
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October 25, 2005
Back, and how-
Makes a roaring return to international cricket, with a 93 off 96 balls against Sri Lanka in Nagpur, in India's 350 for 6.
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December 10, 2005
Sunny days-
In scoring 109 against Sri Lanka in Delhi, becomes the highest centurion in Test cricket, overtaking Sunil Gavaskar's 34.
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March 19, 2006
Home crowd turns hostile-
Struggles for 1 run in 33 minutes against England in Mumbai, and after he is dismissed, he is booed off the ground by his home crowd.
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March, 2006
Tryst with the knife-
Goes to England for surgery on his right shoulder. Misses the one-dayers against England and the tour to West Indies.
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September 14, 2006
Back and how, part II-
Makes a stunning comeback, with 141 off 148 balls against West Indies in a DLF Cup ODI in Kuala Lumpur. India lose the match by D/L method.
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May, 2007
Unwanted rest-
Is "rested" for the first time in his career, for the three-ODI series in Bangladesh. Scores two centuries in the two following Tests.
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August, 2007
Finally, a win outside subcontinent-
With 228 runs at 38.00, makes a significant contribution to his first Test-series win outside the subcontinent, as India beat England 1-0 to win the Pataudi Trophy.
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January 4, 2008
Sachin Cricket Ground-
At an SCG full of worshippers, scores a sublime unbeaten 154, his first century in more than two years and 19 Tests, against opposition other than Bangladesh.
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March 2, 2008
Sachin Cricket Ground, Part II-
Scores his first ODI century in Australia, in first of the CB Series final. The innings is the foundation India build their first tri-series in Australia on.
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October 17, 2008
Scaling the summit-
At 2.31pm on a hot Mohali Friday, Tendulkar steers debutant Peter Siddle towards the third-man boundary for three runs to break Brian Lara's record for most Test runs.
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November 5, 2009
Solo again-
Crosses 17,000 ODI runs during his 175 off 141 balls in a run-chase of 351 against Australia in Hyderabad. It is a chanceless innings that ends 19 runs short of the target, but India choke after his wicket and lose.
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February 24, 2010
The 200 barrier falls-
A stunning display in Gwalior makes Tendulkar the first male player to score 200 in a single innings in a one-day international. It comes off just 147 deliveries, powering India to 401 and a comfortable 153-run win against South Africa.
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October 2010
Awards and rankings-
Tendulkar wins his first ICC award, the Sir Garfield Sobers Trophy, by being named the Cricketer of the Year during the 2010 ICC Award ceremony in Bangalore. A week later he reclaims top spot in the ICC Test rankings for batsmen for the first time since 2002. He is also named in ESPNcricinfo's all-time Test World XI, the only presently active player to make the team.
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December 19, 2010
A half-century of Test centuries-
With India battling to save a Test, Tendulkar bats serenely against a difficult South African attack in Centurion to become the first man to score 50 Test hundreds.
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Feb 19 - Apr 2, 2011
World Cup glory, at last-
After five unsuccessful attempts, Tendulkar finally gets his hands on the World Cup trophy as India win the tournament in style. He contributes handsomely to the win, scoring hundreds against England and South Africa, 85 in the semi-final against Pakistan, and is the second-highest run-getter in the tournament with 482 at an average of 53.55. During the course the tournament, he also becomes the first batsman to score 2000 runs and six centuries in World Cup matches.
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March 16, 2012
Century of centuries-
Finally, 34 innings and more than a year after scoring his 99th international hundred, Tendulkar reaches the landmark that might never be equalled, scoring 114 in an Asia Cup match against Bangladesh in Mirpur.
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December 23, 2012
Goodbye to ODIs-
After playing 463 one-day internationals, Tendulkar announces his retirement from the format, just before the squad is announced for the home series against Pakistan. Tendulkar finishes with 18,426 ODI runs and 49 hundreds, well clear of any other batsman.
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119 not out v England, Old Trafford, 1990
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England pile up 519 on a benign pitch, and India reply with 432. England stretch the lead to 407, and though the pitch is still good and the bowling (Malcolm, Fraser, Lewis, Hemmings) not terribly menacing, India find themselves in deep water at 127 for 5 with only one recognised batsman left. And he's only 17 years old. Tendulkar battles for nearly four hours, grimly but never dourly, and ends the day with 119. India lose only one more wicket, ending up with 343. With one more session, they might even have won.
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114 v Australia, Perth, 1991-92
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The fastest pitch in Australia has been reserved for the last Test. India have been beaten already, only humiliation awaits. Batting first, Australia score 346. Tendulkar enters at a relatively comfortable 69 for 2, but watches the next six wickets go down for 90. Tendulkar is the next man out... at 240. He has scored 114 of the 171 runs added while he is at the crease, and has made them in such an awe-inspiring manner that commentators are asking themselves when they last saw an innings as good.
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169 v South Africa, Cape Town, 1996-97
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Batting first, South Africa make a matchwinning 529. Playing only for honour, India find themselves groveling before Donald, Pollock, McMillan and Klusener. Tendulkar and Mohammad Azharuddin get together at 58 for 5, and start spanking the bowling as if they were playing a club game in the park. They add 222 for the sixth wicket in less than two sessions, and Tendulkar has 26 boundaries in his score of 169. Even Donald says that he felt like clapping.
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155 not out v Australia, Chennai, 1997-98
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Seventy-one runs in arrears, India start the second innings and despite Navjot Singh Sidhu's 64 find themselves only 44 in front when Tendulkar joins Rahul Dravid. The duo has to contend with Shane Warne bowling from round the wicket and into the rough. Tendulkar, who has practised against Laxman Sivaramakrishnan and a few other bowlers on artificially created rough patch before this series, decides to take apart Warne. In a breathtaking assault, with the match hanging in balance, he deploys his unique slog sweeps against the spin to steer India past Australia and snatch a matchwinning 347-run lead.
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Century v Australia, Sharjah, 1997-98
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India are chasing Australia's 284, but more importantly they need to score 254 to beat New Zealand on net run-rate, and make their way to the final. Single-handedly, Tendulkar takes India close to the cut-off when sandstorms disrupt the play. Just when making it to the final looks difficult, Tendulkar not only takes them beyond that target, but for a brief while even flirts with a win.
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134 v Australia, Sharjah final, 1997-98
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It surely couldn't have got better. It does. Two days later, at the same venue, chasing a similar 273 to win the final, Tendulkar decimates the Australian attack. By the time he is out in the 45th over, he has left India only 25 more to get. Shane Warne is so devastated he confesses Tendulkar hits him for sixes in his nightmares.
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141 and 4 for 38 v Australia, Dhaka, 1997-98
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Six months after having destroyed Aussie bowlers' psyche, Tendulkar meets them again in big-match environment: the quarter-final of the ICC Champions Trophy. And again, single-handedly, he puts Australia out of the game with his third century against them in three matches. His 141 come in 128 balls, and India are 280 in the 46th over when he gets out. To put the matter beyond doubt, Tendulkar kills an interesting contest by dismissing Steve Waugh, Michael Bevan, and Damien Martyn in his 4 for 38. Tendulkar is clearly dominating Australia like no other single player has ever done before.
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136 v Pakistan, Chennai, 1998-99
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Few Indian batting performances have been as heroic, or as tragic. Chasing 271 in the fourth innings of a low-scoring match, India experience a familiar top-order collapse, and are sinking fast at 82 for 5. Tendulkar finds an able ally in Nayan Mongia, and rebuilds the innings in a painstaking, un-Tendulkarlike manner. After helping add 136 for the sixth wicket, Mongia departs to an ungainly pull, and Tendulkar's back is also giving way. Tendulkar shifts up a gear or two, and starts dealing only in boundaries. But one error of judgment and it's all over. Saqlain Mushtaq defeats his intended lofted on-drive with a magical ball that drifts the other way, catches the outer part of Tendulkar's bat and balloons up to mid-off. The tail disgrace themselves, and India fall short by a gut-wrenching 13 runs.
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233 not out v Tamil Nadu, Mumbai, 1999-2000
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It's a Ranji semi-final against a strong Tamil Nadu, and Mumbai are looking down the barrel after their bowlers have given away 485 runs. First-innings lead is crucial in this contest, but Mumbai look down for the count at 127 for 4. This is when old pal Vinod Kambli joins Tendulkar, and they see Mumbai out of trouble. But they are not anywhere near home when Kambli falls with the score at 266. Tendulkar then takes charge, and with the lower order, sees Mumbai just past Tamil Nadu's total and into a final Mumbai would win. This is just the kind of against-the-odds matchwinning knock that has eluded him at international level. Perhaps that's why he later says, "This is one of my best innings. This includes one-day internationals and Test cricket also."
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155 v South Africa, Bloemfontein, 2001-02
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On the first day on an overseas series, India's plight is a familiar one - four down for 68, with all the wickets going just the way the South Africans expected - to rising balls. Tendulkar has a debutant for company, with another to follow. He takes 17 balls to score his first run, but 101 come off the next 97 deliveries. It isn't the prettiest of Tendulkar's Test tons, but it is one of the most savage, characterised by pulls and vicious upper-cuts. The South Africans have a plan for India, and Tendulkar makes a mockery of it. By the time Tendulkar's innings ends, India are reasonably well placed, though they go on to lose the Test.
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98 v Pakistan, Centurion, 2003
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Tendulkar has been compelled to live this World Cup match against Pakistan for a year in advance. He has not slept properly for 12 nights going into the match. A target of 274 set for India, bat in hand, Tendulkar shows no anxiety whatsoever. Or is it that nervous energy? He just finishes his hyped battle against Shoaib Akhtar in the latter's first over with an uppercut for six, and then a flick and a straight block for two boundaries. Every bowler is dealt with similar disdain. He has not looked more pumped up before. And although he misses a special century, he leaves the match sealed in the 28th over.
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117 not out v Australia, Sydney, 2007-08
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Going into the first final of the CB Series, Tendulkar has not achieved many things: an ODI century in Australia, a century in 37 innings, a chase-winning century since 2001, a century in any chase since March 2004. In a 235-minute masterclass, he washes it all away, scoring 117 off 120 balls and leading India to the 240-run target on a difficult wicket just about solo. He dominates in the initial overs, shepherds the tentative middle order, and stays unbeaten to see the side home.
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37 and 103 not out v England, Chennai, 2008-09
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Tendulkar has to his name every batting record worth having, except one perhaps: a fourth-innings century in an Indian win. Having struggled against the spin of Swann and Panesar in the first innings of the Chennai Test, India are left to chase 387 on a deteriorating pitch. The explosive start, which puts England off track, is provided by Virender Sehwag, the final touches by Yuvraj Singh, but in the middle Tendulkar nurtures the chase, hardly ever looking under pressure, scampering through for singles like a teenager, breaking shackles every now and then with odd boundaries. The final one of those boundaries finishes the chase, and also brings up that elusive century. Works a treat that it comes at the same venue that was the scene of a supreme heartbreak nine years ago against Pakistan, and weeks after India faced one of its worst terror attacks. With Tendulkar, India smiles again.
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175 v Australia, Hyderabad, 2009-10
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Australia have amassed a massive 350 on a flat pitch in Hyderabad, and Tendulkar almost chases it, with no support to speak of. Displays through the innings how he has mastered the art of scoring quick runs without taking any risks. The only support comes from Virender Sehwag (38) and Suresh Raina (59), but they both look like getting out any time. Tendulkar, who scores 175 off 141 balls, gives hardly a chance through the classic. When he does take risk, it's worth preserving those shots in an album: the stepping out to spinners and lofts straight down the ground, and the unbelievably late flicks, even later late cuts. It all ends in heartbreak, though: in Chennai in 1998-99, Tendulkar, having played an innings as incredible as this, left the last three wickets 17 to get; on this night he leaves them 19 off 17. The rest choke like they did in Chennai.
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200* v South Africa, Gwalior, 2009-10
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It took nearly 40 years of waiting, but the accolade fittingly went to the best ODI batsman in history. Tendulkar overcame cramps, heat and humidity to play his most breathtaking innings, to send the cricket world into a frenzy. On a road of a pitch in Gwalior, Tendulkar began his innings with crisply timed shots past the packed infield. His placement was impeccable and not once did he drop anchor. Yusuf Pathan, MS Dhoni and Dinesh Karthik frolicked as well, but they were mere bystanders as Tendulkar continued with his act of savagery. He fetched 100 runs off fours alone and also ran swiftly between the wickets. He went past his personal best of 186, and broke Saeed Anwar and Charles Coventry's record with a glance to fine leg. A squirt to backward point got him to 200, and he ended up scoring almost exactly half of India's total.
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146 v South Africa, Cape Town, 2010-11
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At Newlands, India are looking for their first series win in South Africa, but with Dale Steyn bowling perfect outswing at mid-140 kph, often pitching leg and hitting off, they are in serious danger of losing the series. In reply to South Africa's 362, they are 28 for 2 before Tendulkar stages a recovery. With the semi-old ball, though, Steyn produces two spells of near-unplayable swing bowling either side of lunch on day three. Tendulkar faces 48 of those 66 deliveries, each one of which looked like taking a wicket. He defends obstinately, standing outside the crease to cover the swing and negate LBWs; he leaves better than others; and he releases pressure by taking calculated risks against the other bowlers. His 146 is the difference between a first-innings lead and a huge deficit; for good measure he bats out 146 minutes for 14 runs on the final day to ensure the draw.
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The saint
(Nov 1, 2003)
His purity of technique and image make him an icon with more than a touch of the divine -
Mark 3
(Jun 1, 2006)
Not the wunderkind of 15 years ago, Sachin Tendulkar talks to Cricinfo about looking at life and his game with equanimity and stoicism -
A ride with Sachin
(Oct 1, 2004)
Tendulkar speaks about his 15 years in cricket and how the game, and his approach to it, have changed -
Sachin Tendulkar
(1997)
It was one brief moment in time -
Sachin Tendulkar: Man, myth or product of the times?
(Oct 16, 2000)
Sachin Tendulkar.. -
A singular icon
(Sep 1, 2002)
Like Michael Jordan and Tiger Woods, Sachin Tendulkar dominates his sport comprehensively, but unlike them he is the sole focus of an entire nation and its quest for identity -
'The best batsman I've bowled to'
(Sep 1, 2002)
There's Steve Waugh and Brian Lara. And then, a notch above, there's Sachin Tendulkar - Since the beginning of 2006, Tendulkar averages 48.94 in ODIs at a strike rate of 87.18, with eight hundreds and 22 fifties.
- Thirty-three out of Tendulkar's 46 hundreds have come in victories. When India win, he averages 57.85 at a strike rate of 90.53; in losses it comes down to 32.91, at a strike rate of 79.57.
- Among teams against whom he has played more than one ODI, Tendulkar averages more than 39 versus all sides except South Africa (against whom he averages 34.36).
- Tendulkar has struck 1929 fours in ODIs, which is 429 more than the next-best - Sanath Jayasuriya has 1500.
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54 not out v Pakistan, Sydney, 1992
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He had just announced himself to the world with a breathtaking Test century in Perth, and later during that season he followed it up with an unbeaten fifty in the high-pressure World Cup match against arch rivals Pakistan.
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Twin centuries v Australia, Sharjah, 1997-98
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Single-handedly, he carried India into the final with a century that took them past New Zealand's net run-rate, and followed it up with an even better show two nights later, winning India the tri-series.
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98 v Pakistan, Centurion, 2003
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He had been forced to live this World Cup match for a year in advance, and hadn't slept properly for 12 nights going into the match. Chasing 274, though, he showed no anxiety whatsoever, dealing with every bowler with disdain, saving the worst for young tyro, Shoaib Akhtar. Although he missed a special century, he left the match sealed in the 28th over.
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200 v South Africa, Gwalior, 2009-10
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Forty years in the making, it was fitting that the first double-century was scored by the format's best batsman.
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- 'Aggressive' Tendulkar keeps on sharing and enjoying (May 8, 2013)
- Mumbai thump KKR to go second (May 7, 2013)
- Tendulkar emphasises on 'situational awareness' (Apr 26, 2013)
- Sachin gets the Tendulkar treatment (Mar 25, 2013)
- Why Tendulkar must retire now (Mar 24, 2013)
| Mat | Inns | NO | Runs | HS | Ave | BF | SR | 100 | 50 | 4s | 6s | Ct | St | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| World Cup | 45 | 44 | 4 | 2278 | 152 | 56.95 | 2560 | 88.98 | 6 | 15 | 241 | 27 | 12 | 0 |
| ODIs | 463 | 452 | 41 | 18426 | 200* | 44.83 | 21367 | 86.23 | 49 | 96 | 2016 | 195 | 140 | 0 |
| List A | 551 | 538 | 55 | 21999 | 200* | 45.54 | 60 | 114 | 175 | 0 |
| Mat | Inns | Balls | Runs | Wkts | BBI | BBM | Ave | Econ | SR | 4w | 5w | 10 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| World Cup | 45 | 25 | 720 | 539 | 8 | 2/28 | 2/28 | 67.37 | 4.49 | 90.0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| ODIs | 463 | 270 | 8054 | 6850 | 154 | 5/32 | 5/32 | 44.48 | 5.10 | 52.2 | 4 | 2 | 0 |
| List A | 551 | 10230 | 8478 | 201 | 5/32 | 5/32 | 42.17 | 4.97 | 50.8 | 4 | 2 | 0 |
| World Cup span | 1992-2011 |
| ODI debut | Pakistan v India at Gujranwala, Dec 18, 1989 scorecard |
| Last ODI | India v Pakistan at Dhaka, Mar 18, 2012 scorecard |
| List A debut | 1989/90 |
| Last List A | India v Pakistan at Dhaka, Mar 18, 2012 scorecard |
Man of the Match
1992
54* and 1 for 37 v Pakistan, Sydney
81 and 1 for 35 v Zimbabwe, Hamilton
1996
127* and 0 for 26 v Kenya, Cuttack
70 v West Indies, Gwalior
1999
140 and 0 for 23 v Kenya, Bristol
2003
81 v Zimbabwe, Harare
152 v Namibia, Pietermaritzburg
98 v Pakistan, Centurion
Player of the tournament
World Cup 2003
Wisden Cricketer of the Year 1997
LG People's Choice Award 2010
ICC Player of the Year 2010
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