Sachin
Tendulkar reaches 35 Test centuries
'It was a very emotional one for me'
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In relaxed yet sporty clothes,
shy grin plastered across his face, under the glare of numerous
television-camera spotlights, Sachin Tendulkar was calm and collected, but you could sense the
excitement and sheer joy as he answered a volley of questions after reaching
his 35th Test hundred. "Landmarks happen. You just go and bat because you
want to bat well and get runs for your team. If you chase landmarks then it
becomes a problem," said Tendulkar. "The
wait was more for the people than for me. After the
More emotional than most
people have ever seen him on a cricket field, Tendulkar
reacted with a long look up to the heavens when he reached the hundred,
and admitted it was different from what he had felt before. "That was for
my father. I miss my father very much. I'm sure he would have enjoyed every
moment of this if he were here. There have been very few moments in my life
when I have got emotional. But this time I felt very different."
Soon after, though, Tendulkar raised his bat a second time. "It was for
the team. This was a special occasion for me. They appreciated it so I
acknowledged them. Everyone came downstairs [from the dressing-room] to congratulate
me. I didn't say anything, I was finding it difficult
to talk. I was feeling shy."
From his first Test century
in
"This was a very
important hundred for me, four-and-a-half months after elbow surgery. Mentally
it [the break because of injury] was very tough on me but physically I could
cope. I got frustrated and impatient, so getting out of it was not a singular
effort - my family, physio, trainer ... they all
helped."
There was a time in the day
when it seemed unlikely that Tendulkar would reach
his century before stumps were drawn. But a sudden spurt of runs, spurred on by
three consecutive boundaries off Muttiah Muralitharan, ensured that he got the monkey off his back.
But getting it over with was never on his mind. "No I did not think of
that. But when they changed the ball, the new one was harder," he said.
"I could hit it easier because it came onto the bat well." Yet he did
admit that he had, in his mind's eye, lived out this moment already. "One visualises before every Test the moment of getting a hundred.
Similarly I did last night. It is part of my pre-match preparation."
On the eve of the match
there was plenty of advice for Tendulkar. What did
the coach have to say to him? "All we were discussing was not thinking
about No. 35 - that it was just another innings, just another century.
Coincidentally I got the same advice from my wife. It's to listen to words like
these. It helps."
And even though he was the
man of the moment, Tendulkar still had time to
remember an approaching milestone for another giant in Indian cricket. "It
[This ground] was always remembered for Anil Kumble's
ten wickets, now there are two reasons to remember it. We hope there will be
similar reason to remember the Ahmedabad Test, where
Anil is playing his 100th match."
With No. 35 out of the way,
the question of where to next popped up, and Tendulkar's reply was spontaneous. "Back
to the hotel!" On a more serious note, when asked what could be
expected of him, Tendulkar said, "I can't say
what heights I am going to achieve. But what you can expect from me, what is in
my hands, is 100% commitment and sincerity and playing for the cause of the
team."
In all the adulation, Tendulkar has somehow managed to remain remarkably humble.
On the day when he broke Gavaskar's 22-year-old record,
he said, referring to the little man with the title Mr,
"Heroes will always be heroes. Mr. Gavaskar will
always be a hero of mine. I would say to him, `Thank you for the support you
have given us. Not only me but other batsmen as well.
It really helps to have senior cricketers who can speak to you about your
game.' I have often gone to him for advice and he has set such benchmarks and
standards for us that you needed to have a disciplined and dedicated life to
get to a landmark like this."
And in that moment there was
a hint of how Tendulkar had managed to stay on the
straight an narrow path through 20,000-plus international runs, virtually every
batting record in the book, the adulation of millions, multi-crore sponsorship deals ... Because at the end of it all,
when he goes out to bat, Tendulkar is still just that
curly-haired little boy who loves to bat.