'Mind-bogglingly mountainous numbers'
How will the world of cricket statistics react to Tendulkar's retirement?

Tendulkar and Bradman: different statistical beasts • Getty Images
It will be difficult. For 24 years, Sachin has churned out statistics like Indian politics churns out corruption scandals - unceasingly, and with often mind-bogglingly mountainous numbers. But the joy of statistics is that all players generate them. If you had a team of Chris Martins batting against a bowling attack of Alastair Cooks, it would still create stats. Not necessarily stats that anyone would be interested in, but stats nonetheless.
In my recent search for Sachin stats to adorn these very pages, a few stood out. In terms of his extraordinary cricketing longevity, my favourite stat was that there is a 45-year age gap between the oldest and youngest international cricketers against whom he has played (from John Traicos, born in 1947; to Kraigg Brathwaite, born in 1992). In terms of his peak batting performances, a stand-out stat was his 52 international hundreds from 1996 to 2002, almost twice as many as the next most prolific centurion in the same period.
No one will ever score 100 international hundreds again. I doubt anyone will even come close. It was possible through a combination of (a) extraordinary talent; (b) unusual levels of endurance; (c) historical timing. Current and future players may have one, or occasionally both, of (a) and (b). But with T20 gobbling up increasing swathes of the calendar and altering players' priorities, it almost inconceivable that they will play the volume of international cricket required to match Sachin's hundred haul. The record would be even more impregnable if he had not been out 27 times in the 90s.
They are different statistical beasts. Sachin has set records for international run-scoring volume that will probably never be surpassed. Bradman's batting productivity is incomparable. He played in an era of predominantly high-scoring pitches, but he still stood out from his contemporaries more than any other cricketer since WG Grace's even more pronounced superiority in the pre-Test era.
Very good. During his mid-to-late-20s peak, in an global cricketing era of strong bowling, he was one of the finest batsmen there has been. He perhaps played fewer great Test innings and series than some of his team-mates and contemporaries, but as an all-round batsman, technician and run-scorer over an exceptional career-span in both major formats, he was the best of his era.