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Sports / Cricket

The ‘Little Master’ to retire from all forms of cricket

Published: 11 Oct 2013 - 03:50 am | Last Updated: 30 Jan 2022 - 12:07 am


Tendulkar holds the World Cup trophy at the Taj Hotel, the day after India defeated Sri Lanka in the World Cup final, in Mumbai, in this 2011 file photo. RIGHT: Tendulkar’s match-winning 103 in a run-chase against England in Chennai, less than a month after Mumbai was attacked in 2008. After the match, Tendulkar dedicated his ton to the victims. “This hundred will give a certain amount of happiness to people but what happened in Mumbai, it’s very hard to recover from that. Cricket is a lesser thing compared to what has happened,” said the Indian superstar. 

NEW DELHI: India’s record-breaking batsman Sachin Tendulkar announced yesterday that he will retire after his 200th Test next month, calling time on an extraordinary career that lasted nearly a quarter of a century.

Tendulkar, the highest run-scorer in both Test and one-day cricket and the only batsman to make 100 international centuries, said he had been “living a dream” since his debut in 1989, but recognised it was now time to call it quits.

“It’s been a huge honour to have represented my country and played all over the world,” he said in a statement.

“I look forward to playing my 200th Test on home soil, as I call it a day.”

India will play a two-Test series against the West Indies at home next month which would enable Tendulkar, who has already played 198 Test matches, to become the first cricketer to reach the 200 landmark.

Tendulkar, 40, said he found it hard to imagine life without cricket “because it’s all I have ever done since I was 11 years old”.

“All my life, I have had a dream of playing cricket for India. I have been living this dream every day for the last 24 years,” he said.

The right-handed batsman, who has scored 15,837 Test runs since his debut against Pakistan in Karachi in November 1989, has struggled for form in recent times.

His 100 centuries in international cricket includes 51 Test tons, but his last century in the longer format came against South Africa in January 2011.

Tendulkar retired from one-day internationals late last year and played his last Twenty20 match earlier this month in an appearance for the Mumbai Indians.

Tendulkar captained India for several years but the high point of his career came in 2011 when, in his sixth World Cup, he helped India win the coveted one-day title at home in Mumbai.

Known as the “Little Master”, he has been widely hailed by his contemporaries as second only to the Australian legend Sir Donald Bradman in the pantheon of batting greats.

Australia’s Shane Warne, who was considered one of his generation’s finest spinners along with Sri Lanka’s Muttiah Muralitharan, said no one else came close to Tendulkar in his prime.

“Sachin Tendulkar is, in my time, the best player without a doubt -- daylight second, Brian Lara third,” said Warne.

Tendulkar, who is now an honorary member of India’s parliament, has sometimes struggled to cope with his iconic status, but he made a point of praising his fans in his retirement statement.

“Most of all, I thank my fans and well-wishers who through their prayers and wishes have given me the strength to go out and perform at my best,” he said.

Tendulkar first hit the headlines as a 14-year-old when he shared a then-world record partnership of 664 runs in a school match with Vinod Kambli, who would also go on to play for India.

Legendary Indian opener Sunil Gavaskar once said he was convinced Tendulkar would achieve greatness when he first saw him bat in the nets more than two decades ago.

“It is hard to imagine any player in the history of the game who combines classical technique with raw aggression like the little champion does. There is not a single shot he cannot play,” said Gavaskar.

Former captain and team-mate Sourav Ganguly said on Thursday no praise was too high for Tendulkar.

“It’s not just the talent he was born with, but what he did with it,” Ganguly told NDTV news channel.

Kris Srikkanth, Tendulkar’s first Test captain, said: “Sachin is still the same person I saw in 1989. That’s his greatness not just as a cricketer but as a human being.”

Anil Kumble, who shared a long association with Tendulkar in the Indian side, told the Wisden India website it was time to celebrate “an incredible career”.

“It will be a sad moment for everyone who follows the game, but it is also a moment to celebrate an incredible career,” he said.

“He is a great player, a great ambassador for cricket and he has inspired many in the younger generation to pick up the sport. Surely, he will be missed. I wish he finishes on a high. He deserves everything in life.”

Tributes also poured in from rivals across the world, with England’s Kevin Pietersen tweeting: “Sachin #10dulkar - Undisputed Champion of Cricket! #SachinTheGreat.” AFP