When Sachin Tendulkar takes the field at the Oval in the fourth
Test against England he will join an elite club - that made up
by Indians who have played a 100 Tests. There are currently three
other members - Kapil Dev, the greatest all-rounder India has
produced, and two batsmen who dominated the bowling completely at
their peak, the stylish Dilip Vengsarkar (116 Tests) and the
peerless Sunil Gavaskar (125 Tests).
And yet, it is already amply clear that Tendulkar will go past
these greats, not just in terms of Test matches for India but
also in achievements on the field. Perhaps statistics are not the
best way to judge a cricketer of Tendulkar's prodigious talent.
However, a quick look at the numbers is revealing.
Kapil Dev being an all-rounder, it's difficult to make a head-tohead analysis, but the other two Mumbai batsmen can certainly be
viewed through the same prism. After 99 Tests, Vengsarkar had
scored 6356 runs at an average of 45.72 with 17 centuries.
Gavaskar did better with 8479 runs at 52.33 with 30 tons.
And now have a look at Tendulkar at the end of 99 Tests - 8351
runs have flowed off his broad bat at an average of 57.99 and Sir
Don Bradman's tally of 29 tons has been surpassed. On reaching
the mark at Headingley, Tendulkar was humble enough to say,
"Statistically, I have passed Don Bradman, but I can't be
compared with him. He's not a normal person. You can only dream
of scoring a hundred every three innings." Quite a characteristic
statement from the man; modest to the core, he still strives hard
to attain perfection despite his many achievements down the
years.
Being Tendulkar is no walk in the park. Make no mistake about
that. While fans hear mostly of the millions he makes in
sponsorship and the adulation he sparks off, few understand how
stressful life can be for India's favourite son. Unable to go out
anywhere in public without being mobbed, Tendulkar has in the
past resorted to wearing disguises when going out for a drive. If
he wants to take his son Arjun to a movie or meet at his daughter
Sara's teacher at school it would be nigh impossible.
It is the kind of adulation that could have destroyed lesser men.
The list of minor geniuses who have fallen prey to such heroworship would be too long to enumerate. Tendulkar, though, like
the Don before him has taken it all in his stride - he remains
cricket's finest ambassador both on and off the field.
This ability to absorb pressure stood Tendulkar in good stead
this year. After the West Indies series and during the early part
of the England series, Tendulkar was under the microscope for
what according to some experts was a perceived lack of form. Even
Sunil Gavaskar, one of Tendulkar's greatest supporters, began to
wonder whether Tendulkar was had fallen prey to under-performing
abroad.
A fallacious argument from the beginning, it fell apart at the
seams after Tendulkar's second innings 92 at Nottingham and the
big hundred at Headingley. In fact in the calendar year,
Tendulkar has rattled off 932 runs at an average of 58.25 in the
10 Tests that he has played ahead of the Oval Test - this
includes three hundreds and as many fifties. Now, exactly how
does that constitute a lean patch? Most batsmen don't do as well
at the peak of their powers.
With another Test against England, two more against West Indies
and New Zealand later this year, 2002 might, ironically, work out
to be a bumper year for Tendulkar. A look at the list of most
runs scored in a year by Indians tells a tale. In 1979, when
India played a record 17 Tests, Gavaskar made 1407 runs and
Gundappa Viswanath added 1388 runs to their tally while
Vengsarkar managed 1044 runs in the same year. Another Indian to
score 1000 Test runs in a calendar year was Mohinder Amarnath,
who in fact remains the fastest to the landmark. Tendulkar, might
not have emulated Amarnath yet , but he has managed the feat more
than once.
And he will again this year. It might be too early to predict
it, but this might even be Tendulkar's most productive year and
he could go past Gavaskar's record of 1407 runs, despite playing
two Tests less.
It is interesting, however, that experts, mediamen and fans from
all over the have expended so much time and energy wondering why
Tendulkar is doing so badly off late. Bishan Bedi, outspoken as
ever, said, "It must be hoped that this lean patch will make
Tendulkar pick himself up, brush away a few cobwebs in his
technique and concentrate on playing like Tendulkar. No one
else."
Why, even the great Sir Viv Richards joined the debate and
opined, "I have seen this problem with Sachin these days, and
especially in Antigua; he doesn't look as relaxed as he used to
at the crease. That I feel, in my mind, is because, maybe, he is
getting close to some milestones. The freedom he used to play
with is not there anymore."
Perhaps, then, it is just a matter of how Tendulkar is playing
rather than how well he is playing that has caused this alarm.
It's no secret that the little man has worked hard on tightening
up his technique and scoring runs, rather than dazzling everyone
with his formidable array of strokes. Take note though, that
these strokes have merely been shelved for the moment not
forever.
In the course for his 193 at Leeds, Tendulkar began slowly yet
firmly, lifted his pitch to a more frenetic yet no less solid
middle essay, and ended in an explosive crescendo that left you
breathless. Offering almost no chances until India were firmly in
the driver's seat, he straight-drove with pedigree, pulled with
the power normally associated with four-wheel drives, and ran
between the wickets like a hare with its tail on fire. A
matchwinning innings abroad, just when the team needed it most.
Isn't that what the critics said Tendulkar never did?