Tendulkar to bat on at 40
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Sachin
Tendulkar |
Record-breaking batsman Sachin Tendulkar turns 40 on Wednesday with
no plans to retire despite media speculation and recent form suggesting
that age is finally catching up with the “Little Master”. Test and
one-day cricket's greatest run-scorer approaches the game with
undiminished enthusiasm and insists he has much to offer despite
slipping from the dizzying heights he reached earlier in his 24-year
career.
“People have been talking about my retirement since 2005, but that
does not worry me at all,” Tendulkar chided reporters at a promotional
event in New Delhi last week.
“Your job is to write, my job is to play. I will stick to my job and
you stick to yours.” Tendulkar, afforded almost religious status in
India, burst onto the world cricket scene as a 16-year-old in 1989 and
has played a record 198 Tests and 463 one-dayers, scoring an
unprecedented 100 international hundreds.
He was singled out by Don Bradman but the Australian legend's Test
average is one of the few marks that Tendulkar has been unable to
threaten, with his 15,837 runs coming at 53.86. Bradman averaged 99.94,
far more than anyone else.
Questions over Tendulkar's future mounted when he struggled for a
year to score the ton he needed to take him to 100 centuries. He finally
achieved the landmark against Bangladesh in Dhaka in March 2012.
Tendulkar, who decided not to play Twenty20 internationals after just
one match in 2006, announced his retirement from one-day cricket last
December in a bid to prolong his glittering Test career. But his form in
the five-day format has also dipped by his own stellar standards.
AFP
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