Tendulkar
the Strong
February 6, 2006
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It was Emerson that wrote:
"Shallow men believe in luck. Strong men believe in cause and
effect", and after an enthralling day at the Arbab
Niaz Stadium in Peshawar, one can only speculate as to
what difference a couple of inches might have made. When Rana
Naved-ul-Hasan came up with a near-perfect delivery
that arced into the pads before thudding into off stump, Sachin
Tendulkar had made only a hesitant 20. Unfortunately
for Rana and
Had his foot been a few more
millimeters behind the white chalk, Tendulkar - who
had already started the trudge back before he saw the signal - would have
failed again, and the premature crucifixion campaigns back home would have
gathered even more momentum. As it was, headlines like "Endulkar" will be looked back on with the scorn and
contempt that they deserve after one of the game's modern masters produced an
innings that he will savour for a long time, despite
it being to no avail in a match that finished in twilight rather than
floodlight.
If anyone was looking for
the Tendulkar of the halcyon years, they wouldn't
have spotted him. In fact, he was almost anonymous in the opening exchanges,
troubled by the pace and movement of Rana and the
brilliant Mohammad Asif, a colossus among pygmies on
a batsmen-friendly pitch. By the time Rana had his
moment to regret, Tendulkar had played out 31 balls,
and watched Irfan Pathan
come and go after a thrilling run-a-ball 65. The partnership with the
effervescent Mahendra Singh Dhoni
was also one in which he was more than content to play second fiddle. With Dhoni running riot and spanking 68 from just 53 balls, few
noticed how stealthily the senior man had turned it on to add 54 from the 55
deliveries that he had faced.
The initial circumspection
was understandable given the criticism that has come his way following the
Unlike Salman
Butt's match-winning effort later in the afternoon, Tendulkar's
wasn't a fluid glide to a century. He struck only ten fours, and one massive
six off Arshad Khan, scampering the ones and twos
with a desperation and intensity that mocked those who have recently doubted
his hunger for the challenge. After the first 50 was ground out in 65 balls, he
batted with far greater freedom, getting to 100 in a further 47 balls. But for
being mistakenly given out - to be fair, Asad Rauf had no way of knowing that he had gloved the
reverse-sweep onto the pad - he may well have catapulted