Thursday, November 14, 2013

Remembering Sachin Tendulkar's first England tours

Kailash Gattani not only toiled on some unfriendly Indian wickets to claim 396 first-class wickets, he also helped young cricketers experience English conditions.
Kailash Gattani
Kailash Gattani
He contributed in a way to making Sachin Tendulkar a finished product before he was picked for India in 1989. After his exploits for Rajasthan, the then Mumbai-based Gattani became famous for successfully managing young teams to England under the Star Cricket Club banner.
Tendulkar, who was part of Gattani’s 1988 and 1989 teams, made full use of the opportunities and thrived. From his Pune home, Gattani informed us yesterday that Tendulkar was sponsored by the Young Cricketers organisation in Kolkata, where Jyotsna Poddar took keen interest.

“The cost of the airfare was Rs 13,600. I remember Sachin’s father and mother coming to the airport to drop him alongwith his brothers Ajit and Nitin. For a 15-year-old boy, he had such a mature head on his shoulders,” said the 66-year-old former fast bowler.

The kid was not just obsessed with batting. “There came a time when I had to tell him that he would not play all the games. If he was not playing in a particular match, he would coax his teammates who were fielding, to come in for a break, so that he could field.
Sachin Tendulkar
Sachin Tendulkar (kneeling with hand on chin) with the 1988 Star Cricket Club team at Lord’s. Kailash Gattani is standing on the extreme right. Pic courtesy: Rahul Sagar’s collection
And when he had no option but to stay away from the field, he would be a scorer. You could tell the difference between the others and him in this aspect too. His inscriptions were neatly written. Everything in his kit bag was neatly kept as well,” said Gattani.

Super ton
The highlight of the 1989 tour was Tendulkar’s 77-ball century against Haywards Heath CC which had future SA pacer Meyrick Pringle, who was quick.
“In one of the matches, Sachin batted very well to score 60.

He was all set for a big score but was caught at extra cover. He just stood at the crease in disbelief before sitting in one corner of the dressing room and brooding. After a while, he asked me where he had gone wrong and I told him that he had played a bit too soon on the rise. Mind you, he never got out in that fashion again on the tour.

Glass act
“He loved batting against the bowling machine. If I remember correctly, once Vinod Kambli set the machine to deliver balls at 100 kmph at a school ground and Tendulkar hit a ball across the road, breaking a window pane of a cottage.
The sound of glass breaking alerted everyone in the locality and the locals threatened to take the matter up with the principal. Being visitors, we were scared and I had to shell out 10 pounds to fix the broken window,” he recalled.

At the end of the 1989 tour, Gattani told his English friends, who were impressed by Tendulkar, that the batsman would not be part of his tours again: “I told them that this boy will come with the Indian team now.

They didn’t believe me. When Sachin got a Test century at Manchester a year later in 1990, the same people called me to ask whether this was the same ‘Tendollkar.’ I pulled a fast one on them and said it was his brother. I finally gave up the joke and said, ‘yes indeed. Same kid.’ ”
After cricket, the cars!
Kailash Gattani recalled that young Sachin Tendulkar was amazed at the different types of cars zooming across the roads of England during those two Star Cricket Club tours in 1988 and 1989.
Vinod Kambli and Sachin Tendulkar
Vinod Kambli (left) with Sachin Tendulkar with two of their 1989 Star Cricket Club teammates. Pic courtesy: ‘The making of a Cricketer’ By Ajit Tendulkar
Gattani drove a Mercedes car whenever he was not in the team bus (also a Mercedes), driven by Les Wood, an umpire whom he befriended during his playing days in the Durham League.

sachin tendulkar vs shane warne


sachin entry in wankhede stadium - sachin 200th test


Wednesday, November 13, 2013

Tendulkar's farewell match



Squat, visored knight, armoured in storied deeds,      Uses his bat's butt-end to shift his box,Takes guard, gardens for invisible weeds,Looks up, thanks Dad, ignores two wheeling hawksNo higher in their heaven than him on turf…Buoyed by devotion's thermals, desis surf.A hundred runs, two hundred, maybe three,Will help delete the demi from their godGive us this day a valedictoryExplosion, oh, let Bombay's sacred sodBe his last proving ground, his portal,To that rare rank: Certified Immortal.Immortals can't cite age as their excuse,Swansongs must scale the summits of their pomp;To fail is to invite unhinged abuseFrom second-hand men who dimly rompThrough heroes' lives and will go starkly madWithout that brilliant youth we never had.

Wednesday, November 6, 2013

Dangerous pitches, and a first-ball six

They say if you were good enough to survive in the top division of Mumbai's Kanga Memorial Cricket League, the Ranji Trophy would turn out to be a piece of cake.
The Kanga League, a club tournament, has a storied history. Wet, uncovered pitches, matches in the rain, tall grass in the outfield, and no helmets meant the conditions favour bowlers as heavily as they do batsmen in the modern international game.

Tendulkar in 1988: a run-ogre © Unknown
Sachin Tendulkar made his Kanga League debut at age 11 in the G division, in 1984, for the John Bright Cricket Club. Ramakant Achrekar, Tendulkar's coach, was so confident of his abilities that he told John Bright's owners that Tendulkar would only be available for a year.
"He will be playing higher-level cricket next year," Achrekar told Sharad Kotnis and Prakash Kelkar, who had asked the coach to allow the young batsman, who was attending summer-camp nets, to play for their club.
John Bright was originally a recreational cricket club owned by a Parsi family from Dahanu, 140km north of Bombay. The family travelled on weekends to play Kanga League matches, stopping in the suburb of Borivali on their way in for an update on the status of weather in South Bombay. It was on one of these stopovers in 1983 that Kotnis and Kelkar bought the club from the Parsi family with the idea of promoting young cricketers who could then progress to play for Kotnis' other club, Shivaji Park Youngsters, which played in the higher division. The new John Bright was restructured to feature six to seven senior cricketers and four or five young players, who the seniors could mentor.
"The Kanga League was dangerous, but that was a test for these boys," says Kelkar, an administrator with the Mumbai Cricket Association for more than 30 years. "Not everyone was selected to play, these were special boys. These guys played with tennis or cork balls, so their movement of feet was so good, they become strong to play [with the] season ball."
Sachin Tendulkar circa 1988 The 11-year-old Tendulkar showed remarkable ability to defend on those treacherous pitches, according to Nadeem Memon, one of the senior players in the side.
For the next three years, Tendulkar batted and batted and batted. There were no rest days. He rode pillion on Achrekar's scooter from ground to ground, and team to team. From John Bright CC, he graduated to Sassanian CC, then to Shivaji Park Youngsters, changing schools to concentrate on cricket, giving bowlers false hope with his small frame, but then flattening them with powerful assaults. Whether it was the Kanga League, Police Shield, Purshottam Shield, Times Shield, age-group cricket or school tournaments, Tendulkar collected runs like a well-oiled machine.
In a Purshottam Shield match in 1987, he scored an outstanding 70-odd against a Cricket Club of India side that featured Madhav Apte, the former India batsman who was the president of the CCI at the time. The CCI was already following Tendulkar's rise, especially after he hit five consecutive hundreds in the Giles Shield. His inclusion in the premier club was discussed by the club's cricket committee.
"In the case of Tendulkar, it was very clear that he would play for a club Ramakant Achrekar wanted him to play for," says Hemant Kenkre, Tendulkar's first captain at CCI. "If he should play or not play for CCI was eventually Achrekar's decision."
Tendulkar had a lot to gain at the club. Firstly, CCI was an A-division club with direct entry to the top divisions of all the Mumbai tournaments. Secondly, inclusion by the CCI would have allowed Tendulkar to develop his game further in international-class facilities at the Brabourne Stadium. The pitches at Brabourne were carefully curated, unlike the up-and-down ones in the maidans, which, although they tested the batsmen, were also thought to be the source of faulty techniques among players. Thirdly, the club would allow Tendulkar access to mentors such as Dilip Sardesai, Hanumant Singh and Milind Rege.
But Tendulkar needed to overcome a technicality to play for the club. Minors - under the age of 18 - were not allowed into the main clubhouse at CCI that housed the player dressing rooms in the '80s. Tendulkar was 15 and thanks to Apte, an exception was made to allow him into the clubhouse. The ruling is still in place and Tendulkar is the only cricketer for whom an exception was made.

"He turned the Bombay style of batting on its head"
One of Tendulkar's first captains, Hemant Kenkre
In July 1988, Tendulkar was included in the squad for a match against Karnatak Sports Association for CCI's Kanga League match at Cross maidan. He walked in at No. 4, as Achrekar had insisted. At the other end was Kenkre, CCI's captain for the match, and he knew that in the Kanga League "the mud hits your face before the ball does".
The bowler, Sharad Rao, was known to be a difficult medium pacer, who played first-class cricket for Karnataka. Kenkre remembers how that first delivery was lofted straight over Rao's head for a six with so much ease it was hard to believe it came off a 15-year-old's bat. It was as straight as it could have been, "in the line of the stumps".
In another match later that season, Kenkre remembers the team was struggling and messages were sent out to Tendulkar to not do anything stupid. Tendulkar defended till lunch but asked permission to play naturally in the afternoon session as he was uncomfortable playing the waiting game. In the three overs after lunch, he changed the complexion of the match with a calculated attack on the bowlers. His aggression rubbed off on the batsmen who followed.
"He turned the Bombay style of batting on its head," says Kenkre. "Before that, if you lofted the ball as a batsman, the coaches used to get upset about why you want to take the risk. But that is the beauty of Achrekar. He allowed Tendulkar to play that way."
As early as his first season with CCI, there were many across Bombay who believed Tendulkar would play for India. As Kenkre puts it, "Tendulkar could have played for any unknown club and still made it big, he was so good. From the first day, it was very clear that this guy was destined for greatness. Unless he messed it up himself."

Tendulkar and his bats







Like every top-class batsman, Sachin Tendulkar is particular about his bats. Veteran cricket journalist Sunandan Lele, who has known him for 25 years, says: "One of Sachin's favourite pastimes is to switch on music, put on his earphones, and sit with a bat in his hand, fiddling with its grip or knocking on it with a mallet. He carries his own toolkit and if he is on his own in a room, he is bound to be working on his bat like it is some piece of art."
 And the number of grips he would like to have.













A lot of fuss is made about cricket balls, but for a batsman, the right bat is like being comfortable in your own skin.
 
He has to see what the grain feels like.








 








 But when you are a run-machine like Tendulkar, you can't prevent your bat from looking cherry-kissed.











There are times, however, when even legendary batsmen will happily trade their bat for a guitar. Tendulkar and his wife meet Dire Straits lead guitarist Mark Knopfler in Mumbai in 2005. Dire Straits was one of Tendulkar's favourite bands growing up.

Driving on the green

Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Tendulkar's 200th Test set to be in Mumbai


Sachin Tendulkar walks back after being dismissed, India v Australia, 4th Test, Delhi, 3rd day, March 24, 2013




Sachin Tendulkar is set to bid farewell to international cricket at the Wankhede Stadium in Mumbai, his home ground. The news comes a day after Tendulkar announced he will retire after his 200th Test, which is set to be the second of the Tests against West Indies next month, to be played from November 14.
"Tendulkar had expressed the wish yesterday that he wanted to play his 200th match at his home ground," Mumbai Cricket Association president Ravi Savant said, "and the BCCI today acceded to his request and has decided that the Test will be held at the Wankhede Stadium from November 14-18."
A final decision on the venue will be taken when the BCCI's tour, fixtures and programme committee meets on Tuesday.
It is understood that even before Tendulkar announced his retirement plans, Kolkata's Eden Gardens had been promised it would get to host Tendulkar's 200th Test. The deal is said to be a bargain for Cricket Association of Bengal (CAB) chief Jagmohan Dalmiya pulling out of the race to be the IPL chairman at the BCCI's annual general meeting on September 29. However, according to CAB treasurer Biswarup Dey, CAB will definitely "honour" Tendulkar's request.
"If Sachin has requested it, CAB won't unnecessarily push for staging the match and honour the legend's wish," Dey said.
The BCCI follows a rotation policy among its 10 Test venues for staging matches. According to the rotation policy, Ahmedabad and Bangalore were to host the next two matches. However, with the significance of these two Tests, the tour, fixtures and programme committee headed by BCCI vice-president Rajiv Shukla may break the rotation policy and instead award the two matches to Kolkata and Mumbai.

Wednesday, October 9, 2013

Sehwag must resist middle-order temptation

Despite his early history as a middle-order batsman,Virender Sehwag's request to finish his career there, rather than opening, may not necessarily be beneficial for him or the team.
For starters, Sehwag is ignoring his own advice. Heonce told the dashing young Australian opener David Warner he would eventually become a better Test player than a T20 batsman. Warner, playing for the aptly named Delhi Daredevils, seemed surprised at the suggestion and asked for his reasoning. "Because," replied Sehwag, "in a Test match the field is 'up' for the new ball and there are plenty of gaps to hit through."

That situation also means there are fewer infielders in position to take catches, and for a player like Sehwag, who hits the ball in the air regularly, that's a major consideration.
Then there's the not-so-minor matter of Sehwag setting the pattern of play at the top of the order. When you come in lower down, the rhythm of the innings is already established, and with a few wickets down, a batsman's approach may need to alter. He no longer starts on an equal footing with the bowlers.
Take the way Sehwag plays spinners, for example. In the past he has shown little respect for spinners and, upon their introduction, he has set about trying to drive them into oblivion via the farthest reaches of the grandstand. As an opener, when he has already pummelled the faster bowlers for a quick-fire 60 and got the team off to a flying start, Sehwag is afforded some leniency when he then holes out in the deep.
However, when Sehwag is dismissed in the middle order for a low score and sets off a batting collapse by attempting an outlandish onslaught on a spinner, it's likely to test the selectors' patience.
Sehwag will have to take these and other matters, like having to wait to bat, into account if he returns to the middle order. Nevertheless, the most important aspect of any experienced player looking to slide down the order is his mental state; such a request is generally an admission the player is starting to have misgivings.
Ricky Ponting made that mistake late in his career and his move was only minor, going from No. 3 to No. 4. Nevertheless, it was a major move mentally and sent a signal to the opposition that Ponting, for so long a dominant batsman, was feeling vulnerable.

Like for Ponting, much of Sehwag's aura as a batsman is bound up in his aggressive approach to the bowling. Once that is diminished with a move down the order it's like being a wounded animal; the predators smell blood.
Sachin Tendulkar, on the other hand, has never wavered; he has batted at No. 4 for the bulk of his career and has remained resolute in not moving lower down the order. In his mind he's a No. 4 and that's the way he wants to finish his career.
Part of being a long-term Test player is knowing where you want to bat. The captain may not always see things the same way, but a batsman must be clear in his own mind what position he thinks suits him best. The Australian selectors of the time had the misguided idea that I should open, and skipper Bill Lawry asked me for my thoughts. I replied: "Bill, you're the captain and if you tell me I'm opening then I'll do it, but if you're asking for my preference then it's to bat at three." In my mind I was a No. 3 and I wanted to remain in that position until I retired.
There have been suggestions that India will need some experience in the middle order when Tendulkar retires, and that Sehwag may provide the answer. India already have plenty of talent and not inconsiderable experience in Murali Vijay, Shikhar Dhawan, Cheteshwar Pujara and Virat Kohli.
That makes a strong top four when Tendulkar decides to retire. To then replace a middle-order player in his 40s with one in his mid-30s, who is struggling as an opener, doesn't sound like a progressive move.

Cricket fixtures

Oct 2013
Wed Oct 9
03:30 GMT | 09:30 Local
09:00 IST
Bangladesh v New Zealand at Chittagong, 1st Test - day 1
13:00 GMT | 09:00 Local
18:30 IST
West Indies Under-19s v Bangladesh Under-19s at Georgetown, 2nd ODI 
Thu Oct 10
03:30 GMT | 09:30 Local
09:00 IST
Bangladesh v New Zealand at Chittagong, 1st Test - day 2 
14:00 GMT | 19:30 Local          India v Australia at Rajkot, Only T20I 
14:00 GMT | 09:00 Local
19:30 IST
West Indies Women v New Zealand Womenat Kingston, 3rd ODI 
Fri Oct 11
03:30 GMT | 09:30 Local
09:00 IST
Bangladesh v New Zealand at Chittagong, 1st Test - day 3 
15:00 GMT | 19:00 Local          
20:30 IST
Afghanistan v Kenya at Sharjah, 2nd T20I 
17:30 GMT | 13:30 Local          
23:00 IST
West Indies Under-19s v Bangladesh Under-19s at Providence, 3rd ODI 
Sat Oct 12
03:30 GMT | 09:30 Local
09:00 IST
Bangladesh v New Zealand at Chittagong, 1st Test - day 4 
Sun Oct 13
03:30 GMT | 09:30 Local
09:00 IST
Bangladesh v New Zealand at Chittagong, 1st Test - day 5 
08:00 GMT | 13:30 Local          India v Australia at Pune, 1st ODI
Mon Oct 14
06:00 GMT | 10:00 Local
11:30 IST
South Africa v Pakistan at Abu Dhabi, 1st Test -day 1 
13:00 GMT | 09:00 Local
18:30 IST
West Indies Under-19s v Bangladesh Under-19s at Georgetown, 4th ODI
17:00 GMT | 13:00 Local
22:30 IST
West Indies Women v New Zealand Womenat Bridgetown, West Indies Tri-Nation Twenty20 Women's Series
Tue Oct 15
06:00 GMT | 10:00 Local
11:30 IST
South Africa v Pakistan at Abu Dhabi, 1st Test -day 2
Wed Oct 16
06:00 GMT | 10:00 Local
11:30 IST
South Africa v Pakistan at Abu Dhabi, 1st Test -day 3
08:00 GMT | 13:30 Local          
India v Australia at Jaipur, 2nd ODI
17:00 GMT | 13:00 Local
22:30 IST
England Women v New Zealand Women at Bridgetown, West Indies Tri-Nation Twenty20 Women's Series
17:30 GMT | 13:30 Local          
23:00 IST
West Indies Under-19s v Bangladesh Under-19s at Providence, 5th ODI