Showing posts with label sachin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sachin. Show all posts

Thursday, August 25, 2011

How did England tame Sachin?

  Here is an interesting article about how England managed to silense the bat of  the maestro who was in search of his 100th century.

http://www.espnstar.com/cricket/international-cricket/news/detail/item659780/Mathematician-helps-Eng-tame-Sachin/



Sunday, April 24, 2011

Sai Baba passes away, Sachin doubtful for today's match.

The phenomenon of Sathya Sai Baba decided to leave the earth on Sunday , April 24,  7:40 a.m.  This is the birthday of a batting phenomenon called Sachin.  Sri Sathya Sai Baba was Sachin's spiritual guru. In Hyderabad to play the IPL match against Deccan Chargers, the Mumbai Indians' skipper reportedly locked himself in his hotel room, with a 'Do not Disturb' placard describing his saddened state at the news of Sathya Sai Baba's death on Sunday.   

Saturday, April 16, 2011

Sachin's scores a century and ends up in the losing side


   KTK beat Mumbai Indians by 8 wickets.
Kochi beat Mumbai for maiden win
16 Apr 2011, 0003 hrs IST, AGENCIES
Sachin Tendulkar's maiden Twenty20 century went in vain as Kochi Tuskers Kerala opened their account in the Indian Premier League with an upset eight wicket victory over Mumbai Indians in Mumbai on Friday (April 15). Mumbai Indian skipper Tendulkar slammed a 66-ball 100 and put on a stand of 116 runs with Ambati Rayudu (53) to set an imposing target of 182 before Kochi after skipper Mehela Jayawardene won the toss and decided to field. But Kochi opener Brendon McCullum powered his way to an equally brilliant 81 and added 128 runs with Jayawardene to help the IPL debutants overhaul the stiff target, reaching 184-2 with six balls to spare.


When the match was poised on a razor edge, Ravindra Jadeja smashed left arm spinner Ali Murtaza for a four and two successive sixes off full tosses to help the Tuskers past the finish line in style after two earlier losses in the tournament. It was heart burn for Mumbai skipper Tendulkar whose spectacular knock, in which he threw caution to the winds towards the end and came up with unorthodox shots, went in vain. The iconic batsman smashed three sixes and 12 fours, reaching his hundred off a single off the last ball of the Mumbai innings, but McCullum stole the thunder from Tendulkar with a 60-ball 81, studded with who two sixes and 10 fours.


The New Zealander was well supported by Kochi skipper Jayawardene who cracked a brisk 56 off 36 balls to lay the foundation for the run chase. Lasith Malinga brought Mumbai Indians back into the game, removing the openers in his last two overs but Jadeja, who made a 11-ball 25 with two fours and as many sixes, and Brad Hodge (11 not out in 7 balls) ensured their were no more hiccups and helped the Tuskers reach the target in style with an unfinished stand of 28 runs. The Tuskers, who had lost their opening two games in their debut season, started the run chase promisingly when McCullum, dropped on zero by Rohit Sharma off Malinga at slip, punished the Sri Lankan pacer with a flurry of fours, three in all, in the bowler's second over.


With Jayawardene looking composed and aggressive at the other end, the Kochi outfit raised the 50 in the 6th over to keep themselves in the hunt as danger man Malinga was seen off for an expensive two-over spell for 22 runs. McCullum stepped out to Kieron Pollard and lofted the West Indian over mid off for a six and then slog-swept Harbhajan Singh over mid-wicket for another maximum to keep the required run-rate within control. Pollard's first three overs went for 30 runs. After 10 overs Kochi were 84-0, ahead of MI (71-0) at the same stage.


The New Zealander, credited with the first-ever century in IPL history, completed his half century in 41 balls with the help of two sixes and six fours. Jayawardene, playing second fiddle while keeping the run-rate surging along, came into his elements just before the Tuskers reached the 100 mark in the 12th over by punishing Harbhajan Singh for two successive fours an inside-out lofted drive to extra cover and a pull to square leg. He went on to complete his half century in a quick 30 balls with eight fours embellishing it.


Tendulkar brought on R Satish but McCullum swung him for a four and then powerfully drove left arm Ali Murtaza over the covers for another boundary in the 13th over at the end of which the Tuskers were 67 runs short of the target with all wickets intact on a good batting track. As a desperate gesture, Tendulkar brought back Malinga but McCullum slashed his wide ball for a four and his Lankan compatriot Jayawardene steered him for another boundary to keep the runs coming along in a cascade.


But the sling-arm bowler got his revenge immediately afterwards with a swinging yorker that clean bowled the classy batsman. At that stage, the visitors needed 55 runs in 37 balls to notch their first victory in the tournament and after a tight over from Harbhajan it changed the calculation to 48 off last 30 balls with McCullum and new batsman Ravindra Jadeja unable to give the charge to the clever offie. Another good over by Munaf Patel, who gave away eight runs brought the calculation to 40 runs off 24 balls. It was then when Malinga struck another big blow.


In his last over, the Sri Lankan clean bowled McCullum when the batsman attempted to scoop the ball behind the wicket keeper to raise hopes for Mumbai. However, Brad Hodge slammed the bowler for two fours in the same over to bring down the target to 19 off 12 balls. Then with 19 needed off the last 12 balls, Jadeja waded into Murtaza and finished off the match. Earlier Tendulkar, who has carried on his superb form in the World Cup into the T20 League, slammed three sixes and eight fours, while one-down batsman Rayudu played a blinder of an innings while making 53 in 33 balls with four sixes and three fours as the duo pulverized the Kochi bowling attack in their stand of 116 runs in just over ten overs.


The duo, who had stitched a match-winning partnership in the previous game against Royal Challengers Bangalore, were in absolute command during their rip-roaring second wicket stand after the home team was asked to bat first on a wicket that had bounce and seam movement initially. The second wicket pair joined forces after Tendulkar and Davy Jacobs put on 61 for the first wicket, and were not separated till Rayudu was run out in the last over. But Tendulkar went on to complete his first-ever hundred in the T20 league with a four, a six and a single off Vinay Kumar who gave away a whopping 48 runs in four overs.


Tendulkar started the Mumbai innings, with a brilliant straight-driven four when Rudra Pratap Singh over-pitched. The champion batsman then slashed Vinay Kumar for another four in the second over, Raiphi Gomez mis-fielding at third man. Tendulkar struck two consecutive fours off Vinay in the fourth over to up the run-rate. But later he troubled by Vinay and escaped two close leg before calls off the Karnataka bowler. The aggressive intent of Tendulkar, who was also lucky to see his edged shot off Tissera Perera eluding the leaping wicket keeper Parthiv Patel, was in sharp contrast to his opening partner Davy Jacobs who could not time the ball at all. Tendulkar's positive play helped MI amass 44 without loss at the end of the 6-over Power Play and his contribution was 31 off 32 balls.


Jacobs finally hit a boundary off the first ball of the ninth over from Gomez, a pull shot on bent knees, before the Kerala Ranji bowler deceived him with a slower ball and clean bowled the South African batsman for 12 in 21 balls. Rayudu, who came into the match on the back of a brilliant unbeaten half ton against Royal Challengers Bangalore, slammed the innocuous looking Gomez for sixes off consecutive balls, depositing the ball into the stands, over mid on and extra cover. Then Tendulkar paddle swept the bowler for another boundary to raise the scoring rate. Eighteen runs were taken off the medium pacer in the 11th over and MI jumped to 89 for one and Gomez's figures were an unimposing 3-0-29-1. 

Sunday, March 13, 2011

Sachin's records in the lost game against South Africa.

  Here are some of the records created by Sachin during the game against South Africa.  Records cannot win a game !!! ( No disrespect meant to the great man.  As always he had done his job.  The blame should fall on his captain and his co-players)


 Sachin Tendulkar became the first batsman to register six hundreds at the World Cup - one each against England, South Africa, Sri Lanka and Namibia and two against Kenya. 


Tendulkar has recorded two hundreds against Test playing nations for the first time in a single edition of the World Cup - 120 against England at Bangalore on February 27 and 111 against South Africa at Nagpur on March 12. He had first posted two World Cup hundreds in 1995-96 - one each against Kenya (127 not out at Cuttack on February 18, 1996) and Sri Lanka (137 at Delhi on March 2, 1996). 


With his brilliant 48th ODI hundred, Tendulkar has become the first batsman to post 20 centuries at home


Sachin took 92 balls to reach his century - the second quickest hundred registered by him at the World Cup - his quickest being the 84-ball hundred against Kenya at Bristol on May 23, 1999. 


Sachin became the first batsman to complete 2,000 runs against South Africa in ODIs, amassing 2001 at an average of 35.73 in 57 matches. With his 99th hundred in international cricket, Sachin became the first batsman to register five hundreds against South Africa in ODIs. 


Sachin also became the first player to aggregate 2,000 runs or more against four nations - Australia (3005), Sri Lanka (2965), Pakistan (2389) and South Africa (2001).




With three sixes against South Africa, Sachin has set a record for most sixes by an Indian in ODIs, taking his sixes' tally to 193, bettering Sourav Ganguly's tally of 190. 


Sachin (324 at an average of 64.80) is the second batsman after Virender Sehwag to complete 300 runs in the present edition of the World Cup.


Sehwag and Tendulkar, with their 142-run partnership, hold a first wicket partnership record for India against South Africa at the World Cup. The said stand is the highest for India for any wicket against South Africa at the World Cup, surpassing the 130 for the second wicket at Hove on May 15, 1999. 


Sachin, with century stands for the first and second wicket, has established another record. He now shares twelve stands of 100 or more at the World Cup, bettering Ricky Ponting's tally of ten century stands.