Sunday, 3 November 2013

2 decades of sachin’s achievement

Starting from 1989
Sachin Tendulkar, at the age of 15, had become the youngest Indian to score a century on first-class debut, in 1988. A year later he made his Test debut in Pakistan, who had started playing for India when Tendulkar was only five years old.

1990
At the age of 17 years and 112 days, Tendulkar scored the first of 87 international hundreds.

1991
Tendulkar won Australia over by scoring 114 at the WACA, the bounciest pitch in the world.

1992
Tendulkar was 19 years when he passed the 1000-Test-runs milestone, the youngest to do so. He did it while scoring 111 out of India’s 227 in Johannesburg. Earlier in the year he had become Yorkshire’s first-ever overseas signing.

1993
After hundreds in three foreign countries, Tendulkar forged his bond with Madras, scoring 165 against England. It was his first home century and it led India to a series victory.


1994
Tendulkar opened in an ODI for the first time, in Auckland against New Zealand, and made 82, anchoring a chase of 143.

1995
The little boy got married, to Anjali Mehta, a Bombay-based doctor, at age 22.

1996
Tendulkar became the first batsman to score more than 500 runs in a World Cup. His tally ended on 523, with this stumping against Sri Lanka, in the semi-final, which India lost
Tendulkar’s first captaincy assignment was the inaugural Border-Gavaskar Trophy. India won the one-off Test in Delhi
The year Tendulkar mania took off in India. He was everywhere.

1997
Tendulkar led India to a 4-1 victory against Pakistan in an ODI series in Toronto. It was one of India’s few successes during his tenure.

1998
The year Tendulkar dominated Australia with two Test hundreds and four ODI centuries, three of which were in a row. His twin innings in Sharjah were the highlights of a year during which he gave Shane Warne nightmares by the bowler’s own admission.

1999
Australia fought back at home the following year and this Glenn McGrath lbw of Tendulkar, after he ducked into a short ball, is perhaps one of the most debated dismissals in cricket.

2000
In his 253rd match – the ICC Champions Trophy final in Nairobi – Tendulkar broke Mohammad Azharuddin’s record of 9378 runs to become the highest run-scorer in ODIs. He’s had it ever since.

2001
Tendulkar didn’t contribute with the bat to India’s greatest win of this decade – against Australia in Kolkata – but he picked up three vital second-innings wickets. He scored a century in Chennai to help India win the third Test and the series.

2002
In his 99th Test, Tendulkar overtook Don Bradman’s 29 hundreds, by scoring 193 at Headingley. It contributed to an innings-and-46-run win.

2003
Tendulkar scored 98 of his record tally of 673 World Cup runs in one unforgettable innings against Pakistan in Centurion. The defining moment was a savage upper cut against Shoaib Akhtar that sailed over the third-man boundary. Tendulkar marshalled India to the final, where their bowlers conceded 359 runs against Australia. The Man-of-the-Series bauble was little consolation.

2004
Tendulkar nearly spoiled Steve Waugh’s farewell Test in Sydney, scoring 241 not out and 60, but Australia held on for a draw.

2005
Tendulkar took possession of another world record against Sri Lanka in Delhi. This time it was Sunil Gavaskar’s 34-Test century mark that was overtaken.

2006
Tendulkar spent months out of the team because of a tennis elbow. He returned in September, with 141 against West Indies in Kuala Lumpur.

2007
More than 17 years after his debut, in England, Tendulkar was finally part of a squad that won a Test series outside the subcontinent.

2008
Often berated for not delivering on big occasions, Tendulkar scored 117 and 91 to lead India to victory in the first two finals of the tri-series in Australia
Tendulkar became the highest run-scorer in Test cricket, surpassing Brian Lara’s 11,953. Fittingly, he did it against Australia, in Mohali.

2009
Tendulkar revisited his glory days with a breathtaking 175 off 141 balls. It truly was a blast from the past, for he received almost no support and India lost the thriller to Australia.

Still a long way to go “All the very best” to the God of Cricket

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