Sachin Tendulkar


SACHIN TENDULKAR BIOGRAPHY


He is the heartbeat of a nation. An entire generation grew up not knowing what an Indian team without Sachin Tendulkar was like. He brought cheer into their stressful lives, hope in their hearts and joy on their faces. It was not just the fans who sang paeans about Tendulkar; Don Bradman, Garry Sobers, Viv Richards and Shane Warne are among a long list of cricketing legends whose hosannas about Tendulkar remain etched in memory.



Tendulkar’s celestial gifts redefined cricketing statistics: the only batsman to score 100 international centuries, the only player to play 200 Tests, the first to score a double-hundred in ODIs, the only batsman to score 30,000 international runs, and the owner of the highest number of runs and hundreds in both Tests and ODIs.
He was a nightmare for captains setting the field as his range and repertoire of strokes had multiple answers to questions posed by bowlers. If there was one stroke from his wide cornucopia which left onlookers spellbound it was the bowlers’-back drive - often just a defensive half-push - that blazed to the straightest part of the ground. Balls came off his bat like a bazooka, thanks largely to a disproportionately heavy bat for a small man.
Tendulkar gave notice of his prowess when as a 16-year-old he scored 53 off 18 balls. He savaged Abdul Qadir for 28 in an over, including three sixes. The gems he carved out in a Riplesque 24-year-career are too vast to list here. But among the finest would be his Test-saving 119* at Old Trafford at age 17, 114 on a bouncy WACA at age 19; 155* versus Australia at Chepauk in 1988, a fourth innings 136 against Pakistan at Chepauk in 1999, 140* in the 1999 World Cup after the demise of his father, the Desert Storms (143 & 134) against Australia at Sharjah in 1988, 241* at Sydney in 2003-04.

When Indian cricketer Sachin Tendulkar made his test debut against Pakistan as a 16 year old, little did the world know that the curly-haired teenager would one day become one of the greatest legends of the game. In his homeland, India, Sachin is more than just a popular sportsperson; he is an institution in himself. He is not just loved and respected, but revered. Called the “God of Cricket” by his fans, Sachin has ruled the game for well over two decades—a very rare feat for a sportsperson. Widely considered to be the greatest cricketer ever, he is the only player to have scored one hundred international centuries. Born into a middle class home in Bombay, he started playing cricket while still a little boy and made his international test debut at the tender age of 16! And thus began the journey of a cricketer who would smash several long standing records and create unbelievable new ones. Keeping in view his awesome performance, he was made the captain of the Indian team. Captaincy however did not suit him and he resigned. In spite of his iconic status, Sachin is known to be a simple and principled man which further adds to his popularity.
When he was 14, Indian batting legend Sunil Gavaskar a great Indian batsman of that time, gave him a pair of his own light pads. This touching gesture greatly encouraged the budding cricketer, who 20 years later broke Gavaskar’s world record of 34 Test centuries.
In 1988, when he was just under 16, he scored 100 not out in for Bombay against Gujrat. This was on his first-class debut. He then scored a century in his first appearance in the Deodhar and Duleep Trophy. Mumbai captain Dilip Vengsarkar picked him up after seeing him batting Kapil Dev in the nets. That season he was Bombay’s highest run-getter. In the Irani Trophy final, He made an unbeaten century. He scored a century in all three of his Irani Trophy, Ranji Trophy and Duleep Trophy debuts, and became the first player to do so. He was selected for the tour of Pakistan next year.
At the very young age of 16, Sachin played his first Test match against Pakistan in Karachi in 1989. In this Test, he received several blows to his body at the hands of Waqar Younis, a pace bowler. He made just 15 runs. In the last test in Sialkot, he had a bloody nose from a bouncer, but he went on playing. He scored better in the subsequent games, scoring 53 runs of 18 balls at Peshawar.
Personal Life
In 1995, Sachin married Anjali, a doctor and the daughter of Gujarati industrialist Anand Mehta. They have two children, Sara and Arjun. Tendulkar now sponsors 200 underprivileged children every year through a Mumbai-based NGO.
Post-Playing Career



Shortly after his final match, Tendulkar became the youngest person and the first sportsman to be conferred the Bharat Ratna, India's highest civilian honor.

Revered throughout his home country, Tendulkar devoted his time to charity work following his retirement. He briefly returned to competition in July 2014 as captain of the MCC team in the bicentenary celebration of Lord's Cricket Ground in London, and later that year he released his autobiography, Playing It My Way. As part of an effort to introduce Americans to cricket, he was named captain of an all-star team for a series of exhibition matches in the U.S. in November 2015.

Married since 1995 to wife Anjali, a former pediatrician, Tendulkar has two children, Arjun and Sara. Arjun has followed in his famous dad's footsteps by pursuing a career as a cricketer.
He went to Sharadashram Vidyamandir School where he started his cricketing career under coach Ramakant Achrekar. While at school, he was involved in a mammoth 664 run partnership in a Harris Shield game with friend and team mate Vinod Kambli. In 1988/1989, he scored 100 not-out in his first first-class match, for Bombay against Gujarat. At 15 years and 232 days he was the youngest to score a century on debut. International career Sachin played his first international match against Pakistan in Karachi in 1989, facing the likes of Wasim Akram, Imran Khan, Abdul Qadir, and Waqar Younis. He made just 15 runs, being bowled by Waqar Younis, who also made his debut in that match. It was an inauspicious start, but Tendulkar followed it up with his maiden Test fifty a few days later at Faisalabad. His One-day International (ODI) debut on December 18 was equally disappointing, where he was dismissed without scoring a run, again by Waqar Younis. The series was followed by a non-descript tour of New Zealand in which he fell for 88 in a Test match, John Wright, who would later coach India, pouching the catch that prevented Tendulkar from becoming the youngest centurion in Test cricket. The long anticipated maiden Test century came in England’s tour in 1990 but the other scores were not remarkable. Tendulkar truly came into his own in the 1991-1992 tour of Australia that included a brilliant century on the fast and bouncy track at Perth. He has been Man of the Match 11 times in Test matches and Man of the Series twice, both times in the Border-Gavaskar Trophy against Australia.
His first ODI century came on September 9, 1994 against Australia in Sri Lanka at Colombo. It had taken Tendulkar 79 ODIs to score a century.Sachin Tendulkar is the only player to score a century while making his Ranji Trophy, Duleep Trophy and Irani Trophy debut.

Wisden named Tendulkar one of the Cricketers of the Year in 1997, the first calendar year in which he scored 1,000 Test runs. He repeated the feat in 1999, 2001, and 2002.

Tendulkar also holds the record for scoring 1,000 ODI runs in a calendar year. He has done it six times - 1994, 1996, 1997, 1998, 2000 and 2003. In 1998 he made 1,894 ODI runs, still the record for ODI runs by any batsman in any given calendar year.

While not a regular bowler, Tendulkar has 37 wickets in 132 tests.
The collection of Sachin Tendulkar Age, Height, Weight, Bio, Wife & Much More… Here I have given Sachin Tendulkar age, Sachin Tendulkar height & weight, Sachin wiki, Sachin family, Sachin wife, Sachin Tendulkar latest news, Sachin son, Sachin Tendulkar net worth, Sachin Tendulkar records, Sachin Tendulkar favorite things, Sachin Tendulkar images. Sachin is an Indian cricketer widely regarded as one of the greatest batsmen in the history of cricket. He is the leading run-scorer and century maker in Test and One Day International cricket. Sachin Tendulkar has been the most complete batsman of his time, and arguably the biggest cricket icon as well. His batting is based on the purest principles: perfect balance, economy of movement, precision in stroke-making, and that intangible quality given only to geniuses: anticipation. If he doesn’t have a signature stroke – the upright, back-foot punch comes close – it is because he is equally proficient at each of the full range of orthodox shots (and plenty of improvised ones as well) and can pull them out at will.
Sachin Tendulkar Net Worth - an Indian Billionaire
Through cricket matches and endorsements Sachin Tendulkar earned crores in Indian Rupees and has 1.37 billion net worth, which is equivalent to $27.5 million. Many people have misinterpreted Sachin Tendulkar net worth to be $1.37 billion. Tendulkar also runs a restaurant in Mumbai, India. Moreover, he is the highest paid cricketer in the world, and makes around Rs 61.15 crores ($13.8 million) a year or Rs 1163 ($26.35) per minute. However, it is difficult to evaluate the value of the movable and immovable properties of the billionaire batsman.
But there is no reason to disbelieve the Master Blaster. For, in spite of his undoubted fame and skills as a batsman par excellence, there always has been an element of conceit about Greg Chappell as captain, which was most “famously” highlighted by him asking brother Trevor to bowl underarm when New Zealand came within one boundary of cleaning up the Aussies in a one-day game in the 1980s!

Chappell and Sachin may have played the same game, but they were a generation apart and their approaches too were a world apart. While Sachin has doggedly avoided getting embroiled in controversies, Chappell reveled in them. His frosty relationships with senior cricket players dominated the headlines during his stint as Team India coach. Sachin Tendulkar’s scathing revelations in his autobiography have brought back memories of an eminently forgettable episode in the history of Indian cricket.

So what was it about Chappell — who, it may be put on record, studiously avoided touring India during his playing days — that he jumped at the lucrative prospect of becoming the coach, riling so many Indian players, including the gentler ones like V.V.S. Laxman? For starters, his approach was abrupt and abrasive, pulling the top shot players out of their comfort zones. In turn, he ended up breeding insecurity, which led to uncertainty in the ranks, with even the well-established lot peering over their shoulder. They never felt that his ideas were for the good of the team. He fiddled around with batting positions and pushed for a youth-first policy — both moves could have worked but for his confrontational approach. Pure cricketing logic may have dictated at least aspects of Greg the coach, but his persona was such that even such apparently genuine attempts were misunderstood. Deconstructing him is not easy, but it is apparent that the man who found fault with the temperament of so many had unresolved problems of his own.

Greg Chappell was a huge misfit in the Indian dressing room because he antagonised the seniors and virtually finished the careers of several promising ones like Irfan Pathan. He made no attempt to warm up to the team he was coaching, and was apparently too preoccupied with hassles relating to his contract with the world’s richest cricketing bosses.
SACHIN Tendulkar has blasted Greg Chappell and has more Australian players in his sights in a book which could detonate tensions of tours past.



Indian great Tendulkar, who remained tight-lipped and controversy free throughout most of his two decade international career, has broken his self-imposed shackles to attack former Indian coach Chappell in his autobiography.

And reportedly there are at least two more former Australian cricketers who will cop a serve when the book is officially released tonight.

Chappell, who now works for Cricket Australia, fired back on Tuesday and strongly challenged Tendulkar’s accusations.

Tendulkar’s words are among the controversial opinions he has ever expressed in a guarded life and Chappell’s reply represents one of the few times anyone connected with the game has been bold enough to challenge Tendulkar’s word.
He also branded Chappell a “ringmaster’’ who wanted to push a group of senior players into retirement.

Chappell was stunned by the claims.

“Whilst I don’t propose to get into a war of words, I can state quite clearly that during my time as Indian coach I never contemplated Sachin replacing Rahul Dravid as captain,’’ Chappell said in a statement.

“I was therefore very surprised to read the claims made in the book.

“During those years, I only ever visited Sachin’s home once, and that was with our physio and assistant coach during Sachin’s rehabilitation from injury, at least 12 months earlier than what was reported in the book. We enjoyed a pleasant afternoon together but the subject of captaincy was never raised.”
When he started to loose focus due to exhaustion, his coach Ramakant used to put a one rupee coin on the top the stumps and said whoever dismissed Sachin would get that particular coin. If anyone could not bowl him out then, Sachin used to get that particular one rupee coin. Tendulkar has got 13 such coins. He already became quite famous while playing for his state. The experts said that this cricketer would become one of the best one day.

His full dedication and discipline towards cricket helped him to become what he is today. When Sachin was 14 years old, he once became the ball boy in the during the world cup of 1987. At that the legendary cricketer Sunil Gavasker gift this young cricket his own ultra light pads. This encouraged him a lot. In the year 1995, on 24th of May, Tendulkar married Anjali who is pediatrician by profession. Anjali gave birth to Sara on 12th of October 1997 and Arjun on 24th of September 1999. Sachin is six years younger than Anjali.

Tendulkar has broken almost all the batting records in the history of cricket and has scored the highest number of runs in ODI and Test Crickets and is the owner of the highest number of centuries. He is the present captain of Mumbai Indians in the Indian Premier League. He always dominates the bowlers whenever he comes to crease for batting. It is a challenge for every bowler to bowl out this great batsman.
Playing It My Way is the autobiography of former Indian cricketer Sachin Tendulkar. It was launched on 5 November 2014 in Mumbai. The book summarises Tendulkar’s early days, his 24 years of international career and aspects of his life that have not been shared publicly. “I knew that if I agreed to write my story, I would have to be completely honest, as thats the way I have always played the game and that would mean talking about a number of things I have not addressed in public before. So here I am, at the end of my final innings, having taken that last walk back to the pavilion, ready to recount as many incidents as I can remember since first picking up a cricket bat as a child in Mumbai thirty-five years ago.” – Sachin Tendulkar.
Injuries and decline

Tendulkar continued his good form in Test cricket in 2001 and 2002, with some pivotal performances with both bat and ball. Tendulkar took three wickets on the final day of the famous Kolkata Test against Australia in 2001. Tendulkar took the key wickets of Matthew Hayden and Adam Gilchrist, centurions in the previous test.
Tendulkar made 673 runs in 11 matches in the 2003 Cricket World Cup, helping India reach the final. While Australia retained the trophy that they had won in 1999, Tendulkar was given the Man of the Tournament award. The drawn series as India toured Australia in 2003/04 saw Tendulkar making his mark in the last Test of the series, with 241* in Sydney, putting India in a virtually unbeatable position. He followed up the innings with an unbeaten 50 in the second innings of the test and then an unbeaten 194 against Pakistan at Multan in the following series. The 194 was controversial in that he was stranded prior to reaching his double century as a result of a declaration by Rahul Dravid. In meeting with the press that evening, Tendulkar responded to a question on missing 200 against Pakistan by stating that he was disappointed and that the declaration had taken him by surprise. Many former cricketers commented that Dravid's declaration was in bad taste. The media noted at the time that the decision had apparently been made by Sourav Ganguly, and Ganguly himself later admitted that it had been a mistake. The controversy was put to rest when Rahul Dravid, Sachin Tendulkar and coach John Wright spoke to the media after the team's victory and stated that the matter was spoken internally and put to rest.
Although he was in strong form, tennis elbow then took its toll on Tendulkar, leaving him out of the side for most of the year, coming back only for the last two tests when Australia toured India in 2004. He played a part in India's victory in Mumbai in that series, though Australia took the series 2-1.
On 10 December 2005, at Feroz Shah Kotla, he scored record-breaking 35th Test century, against the Sri Lankans. On 6 February 2006, Tendulkar scored his 39th ODI hundred, in a match against Pakistan. He followed with a run-a-ball 42 in the second ODI against Pakistan on February 11, 2006, and then a 95 in hostile, seaming conditions on 13 February 2006 in Lahore, which set up an Indian victory.
On 19 March 2006, after scoring an unconvincing 1 off 21 balls against England in the first innings of the third Test in his home ground, Wankhede, Tendulkar was booed off the ground by a section of the crowd, the first time that he has ever faced such flak. Tendulkar was to end the three-Test series without a single half-century to his credit, and news of a shoulder operation raised more questions about his longevity. Tendulkar was operated upon for his injured shoulder. In July 2006 The Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) announced that Tendulkar had overcome his injury problem following a rehabilitation programme and is available for selection, and eventually selected for the next series.