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The Master is born

1973 The Little Master is born

Wisden CricInfo staff
24-Apr-2005
1973
The Little Master is born. Few players have been so destined for greatness from such an early age as Sachin Tendulkar: at 12 he eased to a century for his school in the under-17 Harris Shield; at 14 he added a world-record 664 with Vinod Kambli (in the course of a run of scores: 207, 329 and 346, all not out); at 15 he made a century on his first-class debut for Bombay; at 16 he made his Test debut, against Pakistan at Karachi in 1989-90; at 17 he stroked a sublime maiden century to save the Old Trafford Test of 1990. Tendulkar has gone on to fulfil all the promise of his youthful talent. He had 55 international centuries by the time he was 30, and could be closer to 100 by the time he retires. He aggregated 673 runs in the 2003 World Cup, the most ever in the tournament's history.
1905
On the day the Little Master was born, the original Master, Jack Hobbs, made his first-class debut. Batting for Surrey against the Gentlemen of England at The Oval, Hobbs made 18 and 88, top-scoring in both innings. It was the start of something beautiful: Hobbs went on to make 61,237 first-class runs, a record that will surely never be broken.
Click here to see slow-motion footage of Jack Hobbs (4 mins)
1970
If he was born anywhere but Australia, Damien Fleming might have made three or four times his 20 Test appearances. A high-quality swing bowler who took a hat-trick in his first Test, at Rawalpindi in 1994-95, and in the same winter displaced Glenn McGrath in the Aussie team. As well as being the joker of the Australian squad, Fleming is a useful tailender, and spanked 71 not out against England at Brisbane in 1998-99, his highest first-class score.
1978
An innovator is born. Whatever he does during the rest of his career, Zimbabwe allrounder Doug Marillier will be known for the Marillier shot, a lap-scoop over the wicketkeeper off the quicker bowlers that he used to devastating effect in a famous one-day victory at Faridabad on their recent Indian tour.
1971
A Sri Lankan World Cup-winner is born. Kumara Dharmasena was a key component of the 1996 side, strangling the life out of teams along with Muttiah Muralitharan in the middle overs, and in the final he grabbed the crucial wicket of Steve Waugh. It's an irony that Dharmasena, a bowler who bats, has only ever really won a Test with the bat: in Sri Lanka's famous series win in Pakistan in 1995-96, he played crucial innings of 49 and 62 not out in their victories at Faisalabad and Sialkot. There have been whispers about his action, but he has been cleared.
1940
In Inverness, Scotland, an England seamer was born. Northamptonshire's 6ft 7ins David Larter had an outstanding Test debut when he took nine Pakistan wickets at The Oval in 1962. He never really reached those heights again, though, and his second five-for came in the last of his ten Tests, the defeat to South Africa at Trent Bridge in 1965. Injuries plagued his career and he retired before he turned 30, ending with the unfortunate total of 666 first-class wickets.
1979
The end of World Series Cricket, effectively, as this was the day that the Australian Cricket Board granted Kerry Packer exclusive rights to show matches organised by them for the next ten years.
1954
An Edgbaston folk hero is born. The meaty Warwickshire wicketkeeper Geoff Humpage was a Wisden Cricketer of the Year in 1985, and a popular figure throughout his career. He played three one-day internationals against Australia in 1981, but managed only 11 runs. This was out of character, because Humpage could certainly bat: he had a first-class average of 36 and a top score of 254. He also went on the rebel tour to South Africa in 1981-82, and is now a police constable.
Other birthdays
1966 Margasaghayam Venkataramana (India)
1975 Mannava Prasad (India)