'I am a normal person who plays cricket'
A selection of Tendulkar's interviews down the years
Easily the most-sought after cricketer • Getty Images
Q. Do you have a private life? Does anyone respect your privacy? How tough is it being a star?
Sachin: It's very tough, it's very irritating because you get no privacy. Like when I got engaged, I didn't want my photo to appear in the papers. It was a personal thing and my fiancee and I refused. I requested the press not to make it a big issue. Yet after that, for 10-15 days, the photographers were following my fiancee. They think it's a very common thing that because you're public property, everybody should know. But everybody should know about my cricket and nothing else.
I always somehow liked fast bowling. I like watching fast bowlers. And wanting to become a fast bowler I had gone to Chennai for the selections where Dennis Lillee was going to conduct the MRF pace bowling Foundation Camp. And nobody knows this but I was also carrying my pads and bat. So I ended up batting in the nets and on the last day I was batting in the nets and instead of becoming a fast bowler I batted there. They said he's too small to become a fast bowler and all those kinds of things. So I batted there, enjoyed and came back.
Matthew Hayden, the dogged Australian batsman, and not a man, you imagine, especially given to philosophical hyperbole, once described the experience of watching Tendulkar strolling quietly out to the middle in Bombay: 'His life,' Hayden suggested, 'seems to be a stillness in a frantic world... [When he goes out to bat], it is beyond chaos - it is a frantic appeal by a nation to one man. The people see him as a god...'
I was very confident because I always rubbed shoulders with the senior guys, occasionally guys who were twice my age and that helped… I believed in my ability. I remember the first Test match I played in my life, it was a difficult one, it was in Pakistan, and after that I thought I will never play for India because I was totally out of place. But I was fortunately given another go, and in the second Test I scored 59 runs and that's when I believed, yes I belong here.
At the start of my career, I would look to punch off the back foot anything short of length outside the off-stump. But I realised you can't keep doing that every ball. There are certain deliveries you need to let go. They may not be the best of deliveries but you need to leave them alone sometimes. And when you are set, it is all about knowing when you can attack and when you can let it go. I thought that came to me with experience. I felt in Australia, where I went in 1992, which was a big tour for me, and before that in England, scoring my first Test hundred in the second match was a big boost. I realised I was good enough to score big runs at this level. That hundred I scored kept the series alive, as we had lost the first Test and were about to lose the second as well. That confidence, having scored big and kept the series alive, was a perfect dose for my confidence.
In November 1997, Tendulkar was leading Mumbai in the Ranji Trophy against Gujarat at Valsad. On the eve of an important bcci meeting, I decided to ask the India captain what cricketing decisions he expected from his bosses. Again, I expected him to toe a diplomatic, if not a 'no comments' line. But he said he wanted the board to appoint a foreigner as consultant and that did not mean sacking then coach, Madan Lal. He must be retained, Sachin said, for he has done a good job. Madan Lal didn't keep his job, although the board later appointed Australian Bob Simpson as consultant.