Sachin Tendulkar celebrates 43rd birthday with wife Anjali, kids from Make A Wish foundation
IPL: Virat Kohli Stamps His Brilliance on Sachin Tendulkar's Birthday
Virat Kohli scored his maiden Twenty20 century on Sachin Tendulkar's birthday on Sunday.
For
Indian cricket fans, April 24 is a very special day for them. It is the
day when Sachin Tendulkar was born. In 24 years of his international
service, Tendulkar changed the dynamics of cricket not only in India but
around the world.
Tendulkar's achievements on the field are phenomenal, with 15921 runs in 200 Tests at an average of 53.78 in Tests and 18426 runs in 463 ODIs at an average of 44. He was the first batsman to score a double ton in ODIs and is the only player in history to score 100 international centuries.
However, for some seasons now, Virat Kohli has been a run-accumulator in all forms of cricket. In the modern era, Kohli's appetite for runs and his ability to be a match-winner is drawing comparisons with Tendulkar. On the occasion of Tendulkar's 43rd birthday, Kohli stamped his class and justified the comparison with his maiden century in the Indian Premier League.
Despite the century, RCB lost the match by six wickets. Kohli remarked after the match, "I am not really feeling good right now. Would have liked to cross the line on the right side of the result. Missed a coupled of hundreds before. Personal performances are good, but not having a win is difficult. Not at any stage was I thinking about a hundred."
Despite the loss, it does not take away the shine off Kohli's knock. Here are some statistical highlights of Kohli's exploits in the game at Rajkot.
4 - Virat Kohli became the fourth skipper in the Indian Premier League to score a century. Sachin Tendulkar was the first when he smashed 100 against Kochi Tuskers Kerala. Virender Sehwag is second when he smashed 119 against Deccan Chargers for Delhi Daredevils while Adam Gilchrist smashed 106 for Kings XI Punjab against Royal Challengers Bangalore.
43 - Before the match against Gujarat Lions, Kohli had scored a total of 42 Twenty20 fifties in addition to 16 Twenty20 International fifties. This was the 43rd time he had registered a fifty-plus score but the first time he scored a century. Incidentally, the number 43 is also special to Tendulkar. On April 24, it was his 43rd birthday.
91.25 - Virat Kohli's average in the 2016 Indian Premier League after five matches. He is the leading run-getter and his phenomenal run in Twenty20 Internationals continue. In 2016, his average in T20Is is a staggering 125.
37 - This was the 37th occasion that a batsman has scored a century in the IPL across all editions. Kohli's is the second batsman to score a century in the 2016 edition after Quinton de Kock.
4 - Kohli is the fourth batsman from Royal Challengers Bangalore to score a century in the Indian Premier League. Manish Pandey with one, AB de Villiers with one and Chris Gayle with five are the century-makers for RCB. Kings XI Punjab have the maximum centurions in their squad with six.
7 moments from Sachin Tendulkar’s career that don’t fade away
Sachin Tendulkar was the find of a post-liberalised India, as Harsha Bhogle
would put it, he played cricket as though he was trading on the stock
exchange – gutsy, flamboyant and with a never seen before risk appetite.
But
where Tendulkar stood out though was in the fact that never ever did an
Indian batsman bat with the weight of the country’s expectations on his
shoulder. Never ever did an entire generation grow up inspired by the
exploits of a single cricketer. In the globalised world, Tendulkar was
India’s champion, competing with and beating the best across the globe.
1) ‘I’ll play!’
Sachin
turns 43 today and to celebrate another year in the life of the Master,
we take a look at seven moments from his career that don't fade away,
just like the Axe Signature range of body perfumes.
‘Will this bloke be able to play?’ was
the question doing the rounds in Pakistan when a baby-faced 16-year-old
first made his debut for India in 1989. It was a pertinent question to
ask. Never before had a boy barely in his teens padded up to face the
likes of Imran Khan, Wasim Akram and Waqar Younis.
However,
it didn’t take too long for the question to answer. In the Fourth Test
at Sialkot, on a green pitch, a young Tendulkar took guard to help India
save the Test with Navjot Sidhu on the other end.
Soon,
a Waqar bouncer whizzed off the pitch and hit Tendulkar on his nose. A
deep cut not only oozed out blood but also left the batsman dazed. A
concerned 12th Man, Salil Ankola ran out to check on Tendulkar,
wondering if he would be willing to bat on or not.
Much
to everyone’s surprise, Tendulkar took a towel, splashed water on his
face – wiped the blood off and said something to the tune of ‘I’ll play!’ and took guard again. Much cajoling and reasoning from the rest of his teammates bore no fruits, the youngster would play on.
2) Australian crowd stood up to applaud
The Mumbaikar might have been playing his first Test series, but one could see that he had the makings of a champion.
For
years, there were pitches that batsmen bred on the flat subcontinental
tracks dreaded playing on. Barbados and Perth were on the top of that
list.
Sachin
Tendulkar had earned his stripes with some bright performances in
England and followed it up with a century in Australia at Sydney. But
his baptism by fire happened at the WACA Ground in Perth.
The
Indians came into the Test battered and bruised, trailing 0-3 in the
series, facing the daunting task of batting against four of Australia’s
mighty pacers on a track that was known for its bounce. Tendulkar came
out to bat at 69/2 and batted as though he was a veteran of over a
hundred Tests.
Deliveries
buzzed around the youngster’s head, and every near escape made fans
across the globe flinch. The end was imminent. But that end never came.
A
batting session ensued that taught senior pros in the Indian line-up
how to deal with bounce. Short deliveries were left alone, wide ones
were ferociously cut while ones pitched up were dispatched via flowing
drives on the up.
Tendulkar
remained the lone crusader in that innings, sparkling while everyone
around him perished. When he brought up his hundred off a straight drive
against Craig McDermott, the usually partisan and raucous Australian
crowd stood up to applaud. A genius was born.
3) Winning it for Mumbai
When gunmen launched a fidayeen attack
on Tendulkar’s home city on the night of 26 November 2008, the Indian
team was en route to yet another win in the ongoing India – England
one-day series. No sooner had the ODI at Cuttack ended, the news broke
that Mumbai had fallen prey to a terror attack.
For
nearly 70 hours, drama unfolded in India’s commercial capital, as key
instalments were taken hostage. The remaining one-dayers were called
off, the inaugural edition of the Champions League T20 was in doubt and
the English players were returning home with a cloud hanging over the
future of the scheduled Test series between the two sides.
A
few weeks later, under a solemn setting, the first Test in Chennai got
underway much due to the magnanimity of the English players.
An
authoritative hundred from Andrew Strauss in the first innings and
incisive spells from Andrew Flintoff and Monty Panesar in India’s first
innings saw the home team concede a lead of over 60 runs to the
opposition. When England came out to bat in the third innings of the
match – Strauss hit his second ton of the match and Paul Collingwood
made an identical score, taking India’s target to an improbable 387 with
a little more than a day left in the game.
Virender
Sehwag’s 68-ball 83 and a strong foundation of 117 runs for the first
wicket in just 22 overs set the launch pad for India’s historic win.
Coming in to bat at 141/2 with 246 runs still to go, the Master put on
42 and 41 run partnerships with Gautam Gambhir and VVS Laxman
respectively before sealing the game with a 163-run partnership with
Yuvraj Singh.
The most iconic moment in the match came when India was still four runs away from the target and Tendulkar was batting on 99.
Off
the third delivery of the 99th over of the game, Tendulkar paddled
Graeme Swann around the corner as the ball raced away to the fine leg
boundary for a four. Tendulkar raised his hands up in the air only to be
embraced by Yuvraj Singh – India had sealed a historic win. Later on,
Tendulkar admitted that he wasn’t aware that he had also brought up his
41st Test century; such was the joy of winning the game.
That
game, however, will always be remembered for the backdrop it was played
under, and for Tendulkar’s gesture of dedicating his century to Mumbai.
4) Near century at Centurion
The
game was on his mind for over a year before it actually happened. India
versus Pakistan in cricket’s showpiece event – it couldn’t get any
bigger.
On the day of the game, Pakistan batting first put up an impressive target of 274 runs, led by Saeed Anwar’s 126-ball 101.
In
reply, Tendulkar put on display one of his career’s finest knocks,
treating the Pakistani bowling line-up (that boasted of names such as
Waqar Younis, Wasim Akram, and Shoaib Akhtar) with an irreverence that
is only seen in age-group cricket.
A
wide array of shots – square cuts, drives, flicks, upper-cuts and pulls
took the batsman to 98 off just 75 deliveries before he fell to Shoaib
Akhtar. But not before he had played the most epic shot of the
tournament, upper-cutting a wide, outside off delivery of Akhtar over
the third-man boundary for a six.
India went on to win the game and added to their tally of wins against Pakistan in World Cup cricket.
5) The Sydney surprise
In
the 2003/04 Border-Gavaskar Test series in Australia, India entered the
4th Test in Sydney level with Australia on 1-1, having lost the series
lead that they had gained in Adelaide. In an extremely rare scenario,
Tendulkar arrived at the venue having scored just 82 runs from five
innings.
There
was an obvious slump, but Tendulkar had to spoil Steve Waugh’s farewell
party and chose to come out of it at Sydney in zen-like fashion.
Tendulkar
came in to bat in the first session of Day One and remained unconquered
for over ten hours, negotiating over four hundred deliveries for an
unbeaten 241.
The
magic of that innings was the discipline he showed in dealing with his
shortcomings in that tour – the outside off delivery that got him out
driving. A self-imposed restriction on stroke play saw the genius not
play a single off-side stroke for the entirety of his innings, scoring
only when the ball was on the stumps or on his pads.
It was yet another lesson from the Sachin textbook of cricket that showed how to deal difficulties with discipline and patience.
“I
had got out a couple of times to balls bowled outside the off stump. So
I decided not to play the cover-drive. They were bowling consistently
outside the off stump, and I decided to leave all those balls. Then they
had to bowl to me and I used the pace of the ball. I would put this
innings right at the top of my hundreds. I had a plan and I am happy I
could execute it well. I am happy that I was able to maintain the
discipline throughout the innings. Things had gone wrong a couple of
times with my shot selection, and I knew I had to cut out a few
strokes,” Tendulkar recalled later.
Not before having reaffirmed to the world his title of ‘modern day Bradman’.
6) 200* vs. South Africa
The
city of Gwalior witnessed history being made when South Africa visited
India in February 2010. In the second ODI, the Master Blaster played an
innings of a lifetime by ending the innings not out on 200!
A
double century is rarely achieved in Test matches where the batsmen
have the time to build up their innings and to do it in limited overs
cricket is a monumental effort. Taking only 147 balls, Sachin did what
he does best – push the boundaries of cricket to never seen before
levels.
He
smashed 25 fours and hit 3 maximums to set the world record for the
most runs scored in one-day internationals. What is astonishing about
this feat is that it came against the mighty South Africa who had the
likes of Dale Steyn, Wayne Parnell, Jacques Kallis, Charl Langeveldt and
Roelof van der Merwe. India ended the innings on 401, winning the match
comfortably by 153 runs.
Saeed
Anwar's long-standing record of 194 scored against India in 1997 was
matched by Charles Coventry in 2009, but just a year later, the god of
cricket had the record in his name. Rohit Sharma would later go on to
break that record, but it was Sachin Tendulkar who made everyone think
that a 200 in limited overs cricket is indeed possible.
7) Sachin storm amidst the desert storm
One
of the best knocks in ODI history came at a neutral venue, Sharjah. 2
days before his birthday, Sachin Tendulkar gave the world the perfect
gift with his knock of 143, his highest at the time, and helping India
qualify for the final of the tri-series.
Aged
just 24, Sachin carried the heavy weight of the expectations of a
billion people on his shoulders and he did it with aplomb. The innings,
nicknamed the desert storm due to a storm causing a break in the match,
will forever live in the memories of the fans.
Australia
had posted 284 in the first innings but the storm interrupted match saw
the target revised to 276 in 44 overs! India needed at least 237 to get
a better run rate than New Zealand and qualify for the final, but young
Tendulkar was in no mood to just settle.
After
having bowled 5 overs and taken a wicket while conceding 27 runs,
Sachin shifted his focus to the Australian bowling attack comprising of
Shane Warne, Michael Kasprowicz, Tom Moody, Steve Waugh and Damien
Fleming. With 9 fours and 5 sixes, Sachin helped India qualify for the
final with ease, but his focus was on defeating the men from Down Under.
The
master blaster fell to Damien Fleming in the penultimate over and India
fell short of the target. Despite not getting any support, Sachin
ensured India reached the final courtesy his 14th ODI hundred and in the
final, he scored yet another century to beat Australia and lift the
Coca-Cola Cup.
18 years on and the knock by Sachin in Sharjah is still fresh in the fans' minds. Truly, an innings worth every penny.
Sachin Tendulkar celebrates 43rd birthday with wife Anjali, kids from Make A Wish foundation
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