Tendulkar's 35th hundred
Being there
December 10, 2005
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Years from now, if you're an
Indian cricket aficionado, they might ask you where you were at 4:45pm on a
wintry December evening at the Ferozshah Kotla. With the light fading rapidly, and the buzz from the
crowd reaching a crescendo, Sachin Tendulkar tapped a ball off his hips to reach another
cherished milestone. Sunil Gavaskar's tally of 34
centuries was the benchmark for almost 19 years, but the target that Tendulkar eventually sets may prove beyond most mortals,
even in an era of bloated schedules.
This wasn't an innings fit
to rank alongside the 114 in
There had been ominous
glimpses early in the innings, with a clip for four off Fernando and a sublime
cut off Murali eliciting oohs
and aahs from those watching, but it was the surety
with which he middled almost everything that came his
way that suggested that the big one was there for the taking.
With Murali's
variations as beguiling as ever, this was never going to be a milestone reached
at a canter. The tussle between the two was as good as Test cricket gets, but Tendulkar had the last word today with three emphatic
off-driven boundaries. By the end, passion nearly spent and limbs weary, Murali was reduced to hopeful shouts that betrayed nothing
but frustration.
By that stage, Tendulkar was well into his stride, and the last lingering
cobwebs of doubt swept away. Malinga Bandara was nonchalantly driven into the stands at long-on,
and when Marvan Atapattu
called upon Chaminda Vaas
to work his magic, Tendulkar showed sleight of hand
of his own by twice glancing him off the hips for fours.
The punch in the air and the
wistful look at the skies as he ran the to-be-captured-in-sepia single spoke
volumes about the conflicting emotions at work - elation at crossing the
threshold tempered by the knowledge that his father Ramesh
wasn't there to see it. It was just over 22 years ago that Gavaskar
drew abreast of Sir Donald Bradman on this very
ground, with a coruscating 90-ball century against West Indies, and the finest
bowling line-up in history. How wonderfully piquant then that Tendulkar should eclipse one of the guiding lights of his
youth with an innings that he would have been proud to call his own.