Tuesday, December 25, 2012

ODI left without its patron saint



Sachin Tendulkar, after 23 years has decided to call it quits from one day internationals. All good things must come to an end they say. This good thing had lasted so beautifully for so long that one did not want this to end. And now it has ended, to leave behind a void which can never be filled.

Because this is the man who defined what one day cricket is. He showed just how exciting it can be instead of the tag of pyjama cricket which was heaped on it by the purists. Before his arrival on the scene, Indian batsmen were called as dull dogs, who could never play aggressively. There used to be a time when all the Indian one day team combined did not have half of Desmond Haynes centuries. SRT changed this and in less than eight years after his debut, he broke Haynes record for most number of ODI centuries,  inspite of reaching the three figure match only after 79 matches. If this isn’t phenomenal, what is?

His beginning in ODIs was far from promising, with him failing to score in his first two innings. Even after that, he mostly batted down the order at 5 or 6, and inspite of that making a great impact. He was promoted to open the innings against NZ in 1994. He scored 82 off 49 deliveries.The rest as they say, is history. He became the premier batsman in the Indian team in all formats of the game in no time at all. By 1998, he was already the best batsman in the game.

Whenever Tendulkar came down to bat, it was no less than a hero making an entry in his blockbuster. When he batted, it was India that was batting. The silence during his walk back to the pavilion whenever he got out was deafening. But  when he clicked, nothing could stop him and he ruined the statistics of many bowlers , even ending the careers of some. Mike Kasparowicz, one of them famously said “I’m sick of that m********”.

Now most of his critics who have been calling for his head all the times, always said that he never played in crisis situations, conveniently forget that when it came to his role in the Indian team, every innings was a crisis innings.  For more than half of his career, he played the role of both accumulator and speedy scorer, and it was his wicket that the opposition wanted the most. Anyone who watched cricket in the 1990s and early 2000s would remember that whenever his wicket fell, the opposing team celebrated as if they had won more than half the match. And it used to be that way.

He has been accused of not playing a big role in the wins of the team, like his counterparts Brian Lara or Ricky Ponting. This again is being very unfair to the great man. Its the bowlers who win matches, not batsmen, and no batsman can save a match if the team has bowlers who gift away runs like toffees. Batsmen are bound to fail 8 out of 10 times, whether in test or one day matches.Ponting had the assurance that  no matter what went wrong, McGrath and Warne will be there to make amends(so was Bevan, erroneously rated next to Tendulkar by some Aussies due to his high average, a result of sheer number of not out innings owing to his coming at No5). Lara’s life was made easy a lot by Walsh and Ambrose, those two peerless gems of fast bowling.  So was the life of Inzamam by Wasim and Waqar, so that his embarrassing run outs were drowned by their brilliant bowling. It will be interesting to the fans of Ponting to see his record in the subcontinent, given that SRT has scored runs all over, and remains the highest scorer in all formats of the game against Australia and South Africa, in addition to the rest.

Did Indian team ever have any reliable bowlers like this? Who could Tendulkar look back on in case he failed? Nobody worth mentioning  other than Anil Kumble. Add to the pathetic fielding of the Indian team in the 1990s where  catches being dropped at slips , point or gullies were painfully common (Javagal Srinath could have got 350+ wickets in any good test team. He ended up with just 236 due to the aforementioned reasons) .Take SRT out of the Indian team of the 1990s and it wouldnt look a lot different than Bangladesh team of today. He spent half of his career making a mediocre team look competent, shielding the incompetent middle order (Sourav Ganguly and Rahul Dravid arrived much later, in late 1996, and the latter took a lot of time settling down in the ODI team) and being the sole dependable batsman the team could look upto. If this is not handling pressure, then what is?

Inspite of all the stereotypes, it is SRT who has won the most number of matches while chasing the target (54. The next in the line are kallis 53 and Ponting 46). With the exception of 1999 World Cup, he has been the leading  or the second highest run scorer in all the other five editions that he has played. India couldn’t have reached the semifinals in 1996 or finals in 2003 and 2012 without him. For the only player who has scored 18000+ runs, his strike rate of close to 86 is unbelievable. His failure rate is the lowest among all Indian batsmen, inspite of him having played the most number of matches than anyone (463). Right from the time he opened the innings in 1994, he has changed the way one day cricket is played. People are quick to say how Viv Richards was better, but they forget that Tendulkars career has been twice as long as any batting great in cricket. Can anyone imagine a player today who starts at the age of 16, to play for more than two decades, not only as a part of the team but being the best batsman all that while, fighting career threatening injuries not once but thrice and still emerge the winner at the end?  

Indeed he was the biggest impact maker in one day cricket more than anyone. Right from giving Shane Warne nightmares, to ending the careers of Wasim Akram and Waqar Younis and the derailing of Shoaib Akhtar (which began his end) in that unforgettable innings of 98 in Centurion, or the two unforgettable innings in the finals of the Standard bank Series , two glorious hundreds in the series win against Australia or any of his innings in India’s WC matches that they won. The examples are more than enough to remember and hence his baiters choose not to.

His career was not without lows, his poor captaincy being the biggest of it. The other lows were his extended lean phases in 1997, 2004-07. Add to that the three career threatening injuries. But he emerged stronger from it all the time. He was down and out after India’s exit in group stages in WC 2007. Ian Chappel suggested him to look in the mirror and retire. But he came back with a  bang, having the most glorious period in the next five years, which included many match winning innings, and a long strings of 90s , incidentally for which he holds the record as well. 

His retirement, though sad , has come at the right time from ODIs. He ends out on a high, with his last innings being a gutsy half century, but in all his last year’s  performances were not matching to his calibre. His value in India’s ODI team is way beyond his 18000+ runs or 49 centuries. The writer is not in awe of him due to him being the biggest run scorer but due to the fact that this individual has brought excellence to such an extent in his chosen profession that he has become the very face of it. It was this man who showed the Indian middle class to aspire to become something more than cramming for medical and engineering seats. It was him because of whom cricket started earning its millions and had its millionaires, an unthinkable fact just two decades ago. In a world full of influential figures drunk on their success, he remained a figure of humility, someone who had the respect of all the competitors and even the fans of the rival team, a peerless example for everyone to follow.

It will be so hard not to see  his name in the batting scorecard of Indian one day team, and it wont be long before the name disappears from the test format . Cricket in India, without SRT. We will have a hard time getting used to it.

Thanks a million Sachin , for the boundless joy you have given us for more than two decades. There wont be a better man in blue.

No comments:

Post a Comment