The Little Master's final blast?

By Kurt Sorensen / Roar Guru

From standing on the outside looking in there seems three major foundations that the current Indian Test team will build around during the coming series against Australia.

The first is the characteristic tortoise paced pitches. These graveyards are littered with the exhausted bones of Australian pace men both past and present and the Indians hope they will have enough space for a few more.

The second is Harbhajan taking wickets, which he does against Australia with particular aplomb (as well as doing or saying something irritating. Or both!)

The third is Sachin Tendulkar.

Unfortunately for both Indian and world cricket it seems that one of these foundations is crumbling faster than said sub continental pitches, and it’s not Harbhajan’s wicket taking ability.

Last summer Tendulkar arrived in Australia amidst a fever hotter than a murg saagwala.

The anticipation of the Little Master’s looming 100th hundred drew out fans from all over the nation. People would pack their cricket lunches over conversations on whether or not today would be the day.

Those conversations went on for four months and were never satisfied.

Tendulkar, while not statistically failing in the series, nonetheless failed to reach a career milestone in a significant cricketing contest for what seemed to be the first time.

He subsequently made his 100th hundred in a ODI versus Bangladesh.

And while the excitement may have outstripped the potential achievement, the disappointment in Tendulkar’s inability to deliver in one of cricket’s highest profile contests hinted at what hard times lay ahead.

Like a waning Kung Fu master still trying to see off a younger apprentice, 2012 may prove to be the year Tendulkar’s stone was finally taken from his hand.

From January through to December last year Tendulkar, averaged just 22 runs in 16 innings, a record that is hard to draw comparisons to because there has seldom been a top order player that has survived long enough to have one similar.

But there has seldom been a player like Tendulkar and this is precisely why he continues to play.

India will never drop the man considered the greatest since Bradman. And his overall career statistics and public popularity suggests doing so would be akin to sacking Santa Claus.

But eventually even Santa Claus is shown up to be to a figment of your imagination, and you move on with memories of the good times that no longer exist.

Tendulkar’s form has gone the way of a memory, one that has been lost for a while and that all of India would dearly love to regain. But on current form this seems as unlikely as Harbhajan keeping his rather pointed opinions to himself.

Tendulkar has exceeded 30 runs just once since January of last year. Less a dry spell than a full-blown Martian drought. As alien a predicament that Tendulkar has ever found himself in.

And while you could never write off a player who has made more centuries than anyone else, this recent record suggests Tendulkar may be heading towards a similar elongated, heartbreaking and inevitable end as that of Australia’s own grand master, Ricky Ponting.

At some point in the near future Father Time’s incessant knocking on Tendulkar’s fortified door will become irresistible.

Tendulkar is a great cricketer but he is only a man among (younger) men.

Like Ricky Ponting before him Tendulkar’s record and contribution to Indian, and indeed global, cricket deserves more than a slow disintegration into irrelevancy.

Neil Young once sang, its better to burn out than fade away.

If this is to be Tendulkar’s final series, it would be fitting for there to be one last spark. A final burning innings the master blaster can sear onto the memories of his millions of fans.

The Crowd Says:

2013-02-19T07:22:41+00:00

Shakazulu

Guest


Some time back there was an outstanding analysis of Kallis on this site by a reader which showed absolutely and convincingly that Kallis was way ahead of any other all rounder in history. Sobers was a mediocre test bowler whether he bowled spin, medium, boomerangs, hand grenades or stood on his head while playing the flute and bowling at the same time. He also could not score anywhere near the the number of boundaries per innings that Kallis has done. In fact it is likely that Kallis will overtake Tendulkar as a batsman in the next 3-5 years. That is, if he can keep up his current strike rate which is close to 60.And forget all the rubbish you read about uncovered wickets etc. Sobers career started in the early 1950's when pitches were covered. Kallis has spent much of his career playing on the most bowler friendly wickets in the world, especillay for seamers - South Africa.It is difficult to compare players across eras but 3 names stand out above all - Bradman as a batsman, Warne as a bowler and Kallis as an all rounder.

2013-02-18T09:04:27+00:00

Jamiej

Guest


Agree with your Tendulkar, Lara, Ponting top 3 of the modern age. But on an all time basis, I reckon G Pollock, Hammond, Harvey and Viv are up there as well.

2013-02-18T07:11:39+00:00

Varun

Guest


I think sachin will have a ok series and will retire, hopefully we can beat India but Sachin has a good tour to go out on a high

AUTHOR

2013-02-18T05:17:48+00:00

Kurt Sorensen

Roar Guru


Cheers King!

AUTHOR

2013-02-18T05:17:26+00:00

Kurt Sorensen

Roar Guru


reckon i agree with you Mike. Tendulkar has a supreme ODI record.

2013-02-18T04:18:43+00:00

kingplaymaker

Roar Guru


Truly excellent article and a pleasure to read-a shame you don't write on the rugby section too.

2013-02-18T01:54:42+00:00

Mike

Guest


I agree Bradman is the greatest test batsman of all time but Id consider Tendulkar the greatest 1 day batsman of all time. Its obviously difficult to compare eras & even more difficult considering ODIs werent invented when Bradman was playing, but Tendulkars record in the short form of the game is unrivalled IMO.

AUTHOR

2013-02-18T01:35:16+00:00

Kurt Sorensen

Roar Guru


Good points super eel. i agree that Badman's record still stands as the greatest. Its hard to nigh impossible to compare era's but as far as batsmen go I'd list Tendulkar then Lara then Ponting after the Don. Kallis is an awesome talent and would be up there with Sobers and Miller as the great all round players in history. I'm intrigued to see what happens with Tendulkar in the coming series

2013-02-18T01:17:08+00:00

SuperEel22

Roar Guru


It will be good for cricket if Sachin was to score at least one last Test century. As for whether or not he's the greatest batsmen ever, it still belongs and will remain Bradman's. Bradman was a mile in front of his peers whereas Tendulkar's average doesn't even beat Kallis'. Tendulkar has the run scoring record but he's played almost four times as many Test matches. Bradman's ability to consistently score centuries is unparalleled. Bradman played 52 Tests and scored 29 centuries, scoring at an unbelievable of rate of more than 1 century per 2 matches. Tendulkar will leave a mark on Indian and International cricket as being not only a truly great player but a terrific person off the pitch.

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