Bowled and not so beautiful: Is age catching up with Sachin Tendulkar?

September 2, 2012

sachin_back_off

Mumbai, September 2: Sachin Tendulkar has been bowled 50 times in his career. There have been times when he has been beaten all ends up and castled by absolutely unplayable deliveries, and there have been times when a minor error led to his exit in this fashion.


However, it is the way he was 'cleaned up' by New Zealand seamer Doug Bracewell on Saturday, the second day of the second Test at Bangalore, that even provoked batting legend Sunil Gavaskar to say on air that "it is a worrying sign." Gavaskar was concerned about the "big gap between the bat and pad" in that dismissal.


Tendulkar was bowled by a beauty by another Kiwi fast bowler, Trent Boult, in the first Test in Hyderabad but the reason Saturday's dismissal is being talked about more is that it was nothing more than an innocuous 'fuller ball' that the maestro succumbed to.

Former India batsman Sanjay Manjrekar, discussing Tendulkar's dismissal, made a point about the ageing batsmen having a problem against fuller length deliveries.

He cited the example of India devising a tactic to bowl fuller lengths to Javed Miandad to get his scalp early during the Pakistani batting great's last days in international cricket.

"Even the spinners were instructed to bowl full to him," Manjrekar said. Gavaskar agreed with Manjrekar's logic, saying, "With age, the feet don't come to the pitch of the ball ... the eyes don't pick up the ball early."

It does fuel the BIG question though. Is age finally catching up with the 39-year-old Tendulkar? It does happen to the best.


Who can forget 'The Wall ' Rahul Dravid getting bowled repeatedly during his final tour to Australia last winter prompting an Aussie commentator to say : "Even the stumps need pads now."

When asked about Tendulkar's dismissals, former India batsman and NCA batting coach Lalchand Rajput said : "It is just a normal thing.

It's not that his technique has fallen apart. He is getting out to good balls. Once he spends some time in the middle, things will become fine. He will get his rhythm back, it is just a temporary thing."

More assurance for Tendulkar came from across the border. Miandad feels the whole "fuss is understandable" but uncalled for." If he had got out like that in his youth, no one would have asked this question.

Because he is 39, people will say that he got out like that because of the advancing age. It is a case of human error which has become magnified because of his age," Miandad told TOI on Saturday.

"You can't make such big conclusions about someone like Tendulkar after watching just one or two innings. Such class batsmen will make a big score when they get in, but on some days they do get out early," the former Pakistan skipper says.

"There were other batsmen who failed in the Indian innings too. (Gautam Gambhir made two, Virender Sehwag 43, and Cheteshwar Pujara 9, while Tendulkar scored 17). Why are we not talking about their failure?" Miandad questioned.

Miandad also doesn't agree to the theory that Tendulkar could now be more vulnerable to the fuller length ball. "This is a question that he can answer best but against this Kiwi bowling where no one has express pace, I doubt whether this was the reason for Tendulkar's dismissal.


It is purely a case of being out of form, and being rusty. He hasn't played much cricket in the last few months, has he?" Miandad said. Indeed, Tendulkar last played in an ODI against Pakistan on March 18 this year, before playing in IPL.

Did Miandad face a problem with the fuller length ball in the twilight years of a career, which spanned 124 Tests across 17 years? "In my time, the only attack you feared facing was that of the West Indies.

Their fast bowlers troubled you even as a youngster, so an ageing batsman would have more problems. But I don't think Tendulkar can have similar thoughts about this NZ attack!" he said.

The Pakistani batsmen has a word of advice for those who believe Tendulkar's time has come. "Leave Tendulkar alone. He is the best judge to decide when to go." A match-winning knock in the second innings could end this debate.



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Agencies
February 25,2020

Bengaluru, Feb 25: India opening batsman KL Rahul will be available for Karnataka's Ranji Trophy semi-final clash against Bengal at the Eden Gardens in Kolkata on February 29.

Rahul had asked to be rested from Karnataka's quarter-final match but is now available for the climactic stages of the Ranji Trophy. 

Karnataka had already been strengthened by the addition of Manish Pandey for the quarter-finals, with both Pandey and Rahul having returned from New Zealand after India completed the limited-overs leg of their tour, ESPNcricinfo reported.

Last year's finalists Saurashtra will take on Gujarat in the other semi-final at Rajkot. The other prominent players who will be part of the last four include Parthiv Patel (Gujarat), Jaydev Unadkat (Saurashtra) and Manoj Tiwary (Bengal).

Gujarat, Bengal, Karnataka, and Saurashtra had finished on top of the combined Groups A and B table, and all four progressed to the semi-finals after dominating their respective quarter-final matches.

Rahul has been phenomenal with the bat in the limited-overs series against Australia and New Zealand. He scored one century and four fifty-plus scores in his last ten innings in ODIs and T20Is combined

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News Network
January 18,2020

Hobart, Jan 18: In a dream start to her second innings after a two-year break, Sania Mirza lifted the WTA Hobart International trophy with partner Nadiia Kichenok after edging out Shaui Peng and Shuai Zhang in the final, here on Saturday.

The unseeded Indo-Ukrainian pair pipped the second seed Chinese team 6-4, 6-4 in one hour 21 minutes.

Playing her first tournament after giving birth to son Izhaan, the 33-year-old Sania has begun well in the Olympic year as she warmed up for the Australian Open in style.

It is Sania's 42nd WTA doubles title and first since Brisbane International trophy in 2007 with American partner Bethanie Mattek-Sands.

Sania did not compete on the WTA circuit in the entire 2018 and 2019 seasons to start a family with Pakistani cricketer husband Shoaib Malik.

Sania and Nadiia began by breaking the Chinese players in the very first game of the match but only to drop serve in the next.

The two pairs played close games towards the end and at 4-4, 40-all, Sania and Nadiia got the crucial break, earning the opportunity to serve out the set.

There was no twist in 10th game with Sania and Nadiia comfortably pocketing the first set.

The second set could not have started better for them as they broke the Chinese rivals to take early lead and consolidated the break with an easy hold.

The game of the Chinese was falling apart as they dropped serve again in the third but broke back immediately to repair some damage.

Sania and Nadiia were now feeling the heat at 0-30 in the sixth game but Peng and Zhang let them hold serve for a 4-2 lead. The Chinese though kept fighting and made it 4-4 with another break in the eighth game.

The Indo-Ukraine team raised its game when it mattered as it broke Peng and Zhang for one final time in the ninth and served out the match in the next game.

Sania and Nadiia split USD 13580 as prize money and eared 280 ranking points each for their winning effort.

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Agencies
May 31,2020

London, May 31: "Jacques Kallis, Sachin Tendulkar, Virat Kohli," replied umpire Ian Gould when he was asked to name the three best batsmen he loved watching when he was officiating as an umpire.

The former ICC elite umpire said that he was unlucky to not watch Ponting bat as much as he would have liked to.

"Jacques Kallis. I loved watching Jacques. He was a very, very fine player. Sachin. And probably Virat. I was unlucky in some respects. I didn't see the best of Ricky Ponting. He was an outstanding character, outstanding captain, such a proud Australian," ESPNCricinfo quoted Gould as saying.

"But his career was just starting to wane as I came on the scene. But he was incredibly helpful, so I'm disappointed I have to leave him out. Jacques Kallis, I could sit and watch all day, Virat, the same. And Sachin, if you want someone to bat for your life, he was the man," he added.

Gould had retired from the ICC's panel of elite umpires in 2019, after standing in more than 250 international matches over a 13-year career.

Over the years, comparisons between Kohli and Sachin Tendulkar have been growing and many have picked the current Indian skipper to break the records set by Tendulkar.

Tendulkar called time on his career after registering 100 international centuries, while Kohli has 70 centuries across all formats.

While, Kallis played 166 Tests, 328 ODIs and 25 T20Is for South Africa and he is often viewed as the greatest all-rounder the game has seen.

Many pundits of the game find it hard to pick between him and Sir Garfield Sobers.

Across his career, Kallis scored 25,534 runs in his career and he also managed to take 577 wickets.

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