Tendulkar's
35th hundred
The wholesome master
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Admittedly, the immediate
reaction to Sachin Tendulkar's
35th hundred is relief rather than exultation. It had never been a question of
if, but merely one of when: ever since he was a precocious teenager, it has
seemed inevitable that he would claim the record Sunil Gavaskar
has held for over 20 years. The last leg of the journey was arduous,
workmanlike and, at times, frustrating. Unlike Brian Lara, his great rival and
friend, who hasn't allowed himself to be touched by
advancing age, reeling off hundreds with the exuberance and lightness of a
teenager, Tendulkar has been less liberal about
revealing his genius in recent times. The run-making has not ceased, but he has
chosen a monk-like approach over lucid expression.
For his fans, the countdown
has been nothing short of a torment. The wait has been long. His 33rd hundred
came in April 2004. It took six more Tests and seven months for the 34th to
arrive. It's been a year since then. As professional journalists, we have been
hanging by a thread everytime he has come out to bat
in a Test match in the last 18 months. A Tendulkar
record means serious workload. First there was a record to be equalled and then one to be broken. I can confess now that
we have, on a couple of ill-prepared, short-staffed days, been relieved to see Gavaskar's record survive till another day. As much as Tendulkar has tried to underplay its significance, he
couldn't have been oblivious to it. A burden has now been lifted. The rest us can now get on with our lives, and perhaps Tendulkar will rediscover his old one.
Inevitably comparisons will
be made between Tendulkar and Gavaskar
in the wake of the record. Gavaskar was a more
secured, more balanced batsman, who relied on a near-perfect defensive
technique and unwavering concentration. Tendulkar is
a product of his age. Like Lara, he has taken a few blows on his body and on
the helmet. He can sometimes get himself in a tangle and appear awkward. But
for most of his career, he has sought to impose himself on bowlers, play more
strokes, take more risks and present more opportunities to the opposition to
dismiss him. That he has managed to stay as prolific and consistent as Gavaskar over a career spanning 15 years must say a lot.
In the genius department,
Lara, who can conjure up the most outrageously inventive strokes in the most
trying circumstances, scores over him. But only marginally. If Lara is the finest artist of his
generation, but Tendulkar is easily the most
wholesome batsman of this age. By the time he was 19, he had already scored six
hundreds in four different countries. His first hundred on a seaming pitch at
Manchester saved a Test for India; his second, at Sydney against a strong
Australian attack nearly set up a win; a Test later he scored a stirring solo
at Perth, and before scoring his first hundred on a home pitch at Chennai, he
had already scored a fourth one at Johannesburg.
Nineteen of his 35 hundreds
have come abroad. Most batsmen would settle for scoring 19 in all. His batting
has no apparent weakness. He is equally adept on fliers as he is on raging
turners. He is no bowler's bunny. He can grind as he can blaze. Most great
batsmen are known for a couple of signature strokes, but it's a tribute to Tendulkar's consummate versatility that he has no defining
strokes: he can play them all with equal felicity. In that perhaps he is
closest to Don Bradman.
A lack of series-turning
hundreds - the likes of VVS Laxman's 281 in Kolkata or Lara's 153 in Barbados - is often held out as a
blemish. It is his misfortune, however, that his most brilliant years as a
batsman coincided with some of
What can we expect from him
now? For a couple of matches after he came back from his elbow injury, he
showed that the body wasn't a hindrance when the mind was willing. He showed us
that the skill was intact. Against Chaminda Vaas and Muttiah Muralitharan, he twinkled and charged, cut and pulled and
lofted and drove just as the Tendulkar of old. But a
couple of aggressive strokes ended up as misadventures and he endured a
mini-slump.
His 35th hundred was not his
prettiest. A large part of it was a struggle. But it will remain a memorable
one. And who knows, it could even be a liberating one. How his career shapes
from here might depend on how much freedom he grants himself.