Much was expected of 16-year-old debutant Sachin Ramesh Tendulkar ahead
of India's 1989 series with Pakistan. He had a huge reputation after
reducing one bowling attack to tears on his way to 326 not out while
still a schoolboy
Tendulkar is a big fan of tennis and motorsport. He regularly attends
Wimbledon and lists John McEnroe as one of his sporting heroes, and more
recently he was a VIP guest at the inaugural Indian Grand Prix in 2011
Tendulkar scored his maiden Test century at the age of 17 against
England at Old Trafford in 1990, and three years later he smashed 165
against them - his first ton on home soil - to set up an innings victory
Tendulkar
had developed into one of the best batsmen in the world by 1998, when
he scored two centuries against Australia, and soon earned the "Little
Master" nickname previously bestowed on Sunil Gavaskar Equally prolific in one-day cricket, Tendulkar hits an unbeaten 140
against Kenya in Bristol during the 1999 World Cup in England and is
introduced to the Queen, but India fail to make the semi-finals For all his run-making abilities, captaincy was a struggle for Tendulkar
as he lost Test series against Australia and South Africa during two
spells in charge of the national team The crowds have always flocked to watch their hero Tendulkar, affording
him god-like status - although he struggles to go out in India without
being mobbed, and enjoys the peace and quiet when he stays in London Tendulkar has enjoyed great success against all countries, particularly
enjoying his duels with Australia, and earned their congratulations
after becoming the leading run-scorer in Test history in 2008 India rejoiced when, just weeks after the country was shaken by the 2008
Mumbai terror attacks, the city's favourite son scored a match-winning
century in a Test match against England at Chennai Tendulkar is congratulated by captain Mahendra Dhoni after scoring 200
not out in a one-day international against South Africa in 2010. It was
the first double hundred in one-day international cricket and remained a
world record until surpassed by compatriot Virender Sehwag in December
2011 Tendulkar won the World Cup in his home country in 2011, scoring almost
500 runs (including his 99th international century against South Africa)
on his way to winning the competition at the sixth attempt - but there
was a long wait for his century of centuries Tendulkar celebrates becoming the first player to score 100
international centuries by compiling a ton in a one-day game against
Bangladesh in Dhaka on 16 March 2012. The 38-year-old completed his 49th
century in one-day cricket, with a single clipped to square leg However, he only plays one more ODI after reaching that landmark,
scoring 52 against Pakistan, and after struggling with the bat in
successive home Test series against New Zealand and England, he retires
from the 50-over format on 23 December 2012 Tendulkar is immortalised in wax early in 2013, and his last Twenty20
match is the Champions League final on 6 October; four days later, he
announces he will retire from all cricket after the second Test against
West Indies on 14-18 November - which will be his 200th
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