Sachin Tendulkar

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Sachin Tendulkar
Sachin Tendulkar.jpg
Player information
Surname Sachin Ramesh Tendulkar
Born April 24, 1973 (age 47)
Bombay , India
Nickname Little Master, Tendlya, Little Master, Master Blaster, God of Cricket
height 1.65 m
Batting style Right handed
Bowling style Right-handed legbreak googly , off spin , medium pace
Player role Batsman
International games
National team India India
Test debut (cap 187) November 15, 1989 v  PakistanPakistan
Last test November 14, 2013 v  West IndiesWest Indies cricket team
ODI debut (cap 74) December 18, 1989 v  PakistanPakistan
Last ODI March 18, 2012 v  PakistanPakistan
ODI shirt no. 10
Only T20I (cap 11) December 1, 2006 v  South AfricaSouth Africa
National teams
Years team
1988 Cricket Club of India
1988-2013 Mumbai
1992 Yorkshire County Cricket Club
2008-2013 Mumbai Indians (squad no.10)
2014 Marylebone Cricket Club
Career statistics
Game form test ODI FC LA
Games 200 463 310 551
Runs (total) 15,921 18,426 25,396 21,999
Batting average 53.78 44.83 57.84 45.54
100s / 50s 51/68 49/96 81/116 60/114
Highscore 248 * 200 * 248 * 200 *
Balls 4,240 8,054 7.605 10,230
Wickets 46 154 71 201
Bowling Average 54.17 44.48 61.74 42.17
5 wickets in innings 0 2 0 2
10 wickets in play 0 0 0 0
Best bowling performance 3/10 5/32 3/10 5/32
Catches / stumpings 115/0 140/0 186/0 175/0
Source: Cricinfo , July 29, 2017

Sachin Ramesh Tendulkar ( Marathi : सचिन तेंडुलकर , Sacin Teṇḍulkar ; born April 24, 1973 in Bombay , India ) is a former Indian cricketer and team captain of the Indian national team . He is one of the best batsmen in cricket history and has achieved numerous records in his career spanning more than two decades (1989–2013), including the most runs in test and ODI cricket. Together with the Indian team, he won the Cricket World Cup in 2011 . Tendulkar is now considered the most important athlete in India and has received numerous awards, including the Bharat Ratna as the only athlete to be awarded the highest Indian Order of Merit .

childhood and education

Sachin Tendulkar was born in 1973 to Ramesh Tendulkar, a college teacher writer and poet, and his mother Rajni, who worked in the insurance industry. It was named after his father's favorite composer, Sachin Dev Burman . At the age of nine he began playing cricket on his school team. His coach realized that Sachin preferred to hit the ball hard, which is why he was used as a batsman. At the age of eleven he scored his first fifty (50 runs in one innings ) and the following year in the Indian school championship, the Harris Shield , the first century (100 runs in one innings). His breakthrough as a player for his school, the Shardashram Vidyamandir School , came in the 1986/87 season at the age of 13. He reached 2,336 runs in school competitions, including numerous Centuries and two double Centuries (200 runs in one innings). This was also noticed by those responsible for the selection team from Bombay and so they invited Tendulkar on November 14, 1987 to take part in their training. As a result, he was occasionally used as a substitute for the team , but initially not as a regular player.

Mainly, however, he played under the guidance of the national player Sandeep Patil for their youth teams and got so numerous opportunities. He was also nominated for the zonal youth selection team and was able to achieve numerous Centuries there. He also shone again in school competitions. The highlight was the appearance in the semi-finals of the Harris Shield on 23-25. February 1987. Against their opponent St Xavier's High School Tendulkar and his teammate Vinod Kambli , who later also played for the Indian national team, were to be expected as the dominant batsman. St Xavier's managed to remove two batsman first before Tendulkar joined Kambli on the beat. By the evening Tendulkar had 192 and Kambli 182 runs and their coach, who could not be there on the second day, instructed the two batsmen to make the declaration in the morning and thus go on to bowling . However, the two ignored the instruction and attacked until lunch. By then, Kunil had made 349 and Tendulkar 326 runs. Thereupon they called their coach and asked to be allowed to stay at the stroke, but the latter ordered the immediate declaration and the two players followed the instruction. The 664 runs achieved together in the partnership were later identified as a world record and only broken in 2006. Shortly thereafter, Tendulkar reached 346 runs in another game and confirmed his performance.

The stir he caused led to the fact that he was allowed to play for the Cricket Club of India at the age of 15, which changed the rules for him, according to which no child under 18 is allowed to enter the clubhouse. He was denied the annual Best Junior Cricketer Award , whereupon he received a letter of encouragement from the former captain of the Indian national team Sunil Gavaskar, who had just retired from international cricket . He also gave him a couple of his light leg guards, which Tendulkar later commented on with "It was the greatest source of encouragement for me" (German: It was the greatest encouragement for me). At the Cricket World Cup 1987 he acted as a ball boy in the semi-finals between India and England . Tendulkur first wanted to be a fast bowler at an academy for fast bowling with former Australian international Dennis Lillee , but was advised by Lillee that he should concentrate more on batting.

Time as an active person

First steps in first-class and test cricket

On December 10, 1988 Tendulkar was first set up for Bombay in the Ranji Trophy . He scored a century in his first first-class game and, at the age of 15 years and 231 days, is still the youngest player to achieve this. He achieved the same in his first appearances in the other national Indian competitions, Irani Cup and Duleep Trophy , and is to this day the only one who succeeded in this. In the entire season of the Ranji Trophy 1988/89 he was the most successful batsman of his team and the eighth best of all teams with 583 runs. After just one season, he was nominated for the national team the following winter. He had his first job as a 16-year-old on the tour of India in Pakistan in 1989/90 at the first test in Karachi . This made him the youngest Indian and fourth youngest test cricket debutant ever. As batsman number six, he scored 15 runs in the first innings before losing his wicket to Waqar Younis , who also made his test debut there. He also played in the other tests and a one-day international of the tour, where he was eliminated in the latter without a run. During the last test, Waqar Younis hit him in the head with a ball but refused to seek medical help despite bleeding. On the following tour in New Zealand he was used again, but earned two ducks (no run) in addition to a fifty. He reached his first century in test cricket at the Old Trafford Cricket Ground in the second test of the Tour India in England in 1990 , when he helped India to a draw in the second innings. At the time, he was the second youngest player to do so.

He then established himself further in the Indian team and scored a few fifties in the next tours and tournaments. He made a particular appearance on the tour of India in Australia in 1991/92 . Tendulkar was 18 and the stay for the Indian team, together with the subsequent World Cup, was scheduled for four months. At first he found it difficult. The first test against Australia and the first games of the following Benson & Hedges World Series 1991/92 were average for him. It was in the third test in Sydney when he did not get 148 out in the first innings and, together with the 206 runs by Ravi Shastri, enabled the only draw in the test series. In the last test in Perth , he made another Century, which was considered an exceptional achievement due to the conditions of the pitch , which contained a large crack. The subsequent Cricket World Cup in 1992 was disappointing for the Indian team. The team scored only two wins against Zimbabwe and Pakistan in the preliminary round, but Tendulkar was Man of the Match in those two games . He scored a total of 283 runs with an average of just over 47. For the following summer season he was committed by Yorkshire for the English County Championship . This caused a stir, as Yorkshire had until then barred anyone who was not born in Yorkshire from being used in its teams.

His rise in the Indian team

Tendulkar as batsman awaits the throw of the bowler (2007)

The Indian national team was going through a difficult period at this point. At home she could keep up with any team, but as the tour in Australia showed, they weren't competitive away. This should also continue in the following years. In this team, Tendulkar was the basis on which a new generation was built. During the 1992/93 tour in South Africa , at 19 years and 217 days, he became the youngest player to score 1000 runs, including another Century in Johannesburg , where he stood out with 111 runs on his team, as no one else scored more than 25 runs . He made his first century on home soil on the following tour of England in India in 1992/93 . In his 165 runs in the first test, he got 25 boundaries. Later that year he managed both a test century in Sri Lanka and six months later against Sri Lanka at home . The former played an important role in India's first foreign series win since 1986 in England .

At the CAB Jubilee Tournament 1993/94 he made one of his rare important contributions as a bowler in November . In the semifinals against South Africa he was used in the last over when the South Africans needed six more runs and thus had an advantage. Tendulkar only managed to allow three runs. Shortly before the tournament, he sustained a wrist injury during training that had to be treated with cortisone . According to his own statement, it was the beginning of numerous Cortizon injections throughout his career in order to be able to continue playing at the high level. He achieved the first century of his ODI career at the Singer World Series in 1994 . He had previously been appointed as the ODI's inaugural batsman on the New Zealand tour in March 1994, a position he has dominated for years. In the only domestic tour in the 1994/95 season against the West Indies he won two Centuries, one of them in the second test in Nagpur with 179 runs. He also won the Ranji Trophy 1994/95 with Mumbai as the youngest captain ever .

For the Indian national team and thus also for Tendulkar, the following year was all about preparation for the 1996 Cricket World Cup, which was held in their own country . In November 1995, he signed a $ 7.5 million sponsorship deal with telecommunications company WorldTel , making him the highest paid cricketer in the world. The World Cup initially went well for India and Tendulkar. He scored two Centuries and two Fifties in the preliminary round, and after beating Pakistan in the quarter-finals, the semi-finals were against Sri Lanka . There Tendulkar got off to a good start in response to Sri Lanka's 251 runs when he scored 65 runs on 88 balls. But then the game turned around when Tendulkar from the Sri Lankan wicket-keeper Romesh Kaluwitharana gestumped was. The other Indian batsman were eliminated in quick succession, and when the score was 120 at 8 wickets, there were crowd riots in Eden Gardens and the game was scored for Sri Lanka. Tendulkar was the tournament's best batsman with 523 runs. The following tour in England enriched Tendulkar again with two test centers, one of them with 177 runs in Nottingham .

Promotion to captain

Due to his success, Tendulkar was promoted to captain of the team at the beginning of the 1996/97 season and was initially successful. Victories on domestic tours against Australia and South Africa initially fulfilled the hopes that were placed in him. He was considered a very active captain, which was initially also praised. When there were defeats on the next away tours, hopes were quickly dashed and his style criticized. In South Africa in the winter of 1996/97 his team lost two of the three tests and was thrown once for 100 and once for 66 runs, which was the lowest score against South Africa in test cricket for India ever. Sachin managed a century in both the ODIs and the test series, but otherwise remained lackluster.

A personal low point was the subsequent tour in the West Indies . After two draws in the first two Tests, India needed 120 runs in the second innings to win on the final day. Despite the optimism that he had displayed at dinner the day before when he asked a waitress to chill the champagne, the Indian team failed at the task and scored only 81 runs, four of them from Tendulkar. These and other defeats severely gnawed Tendulkar. He later wrote: “It was hurting me badly and it took me a long time to come to terms with these failures. I even contemplated moving away from the sport completely, as it seemed nothing was going my way. "(German: It hurt me a lot and it took a long time to deal with these defeats. I even considered retiring from sport since nothing seemed to be going for me.)

After the tour of Sri Lanka in India in 1997/98 he was dismissed from his office. He had previously achieved three Centuries in this tour and the one in Sri Lanka , but otherwise could not convince. His predecessor as captain, Mohammad Azharuddin , was credited with the words “Nahin jeetega! Chote ki naseeb main jeet nahin hai! ”(German: He will not win. Destiny is not intended for 'the little one'). At the end of the 1997 season, he was named one of the Wisden Cricketers of the Year . Freed from the pressure of captaincy, his performance as a batsman improved again. In the following tour against Australia he contributed with 155 runs in Chennai and 177 runs in Bangalore, two important Centuries to winning the series. In the summer and autumn of 1998 he achieved nine Centuries in the numerous tournaments in which India participated, but retired with the team at the 1998 ICC KnockOut in the semi-finals.

His performance in the 1997/98 Coca-Cola Cup against Australia, also known as the "Desert Storm", became famous. After a sandstorm in Sharja , which shortened the Indian innings, he scored 146 runs and led India to the final. There they met Australia again, and Tendulkar ensured that India won the tournament with 134 runs. In January 1999 Pakistan came to India for a test series and Tendulkar scored 136 runs despite a back injury, but they were not enough to win.

The 1999 European Cricket World Cup was overshadowed for Tendulkar by the death of his father. He traveled back to his family ahead of the all-important Zimbabwe game but was back on the field three days later. He reported back with 140 runs against Kenya and thus kept India in the tournament. However, the team was eliminated in the Super 6 round and so missed the semifinals.

After the World Cup was disappointing, Tendulkar was appointed captain for a second time by the Indian selection committee. At first he did not want this, because he did not see himself mentally prepared for the task, but was convinced. But this second attempt to officially lead the Indian team also failed. Although they won against New Zealand at home when Tendulkar scored 217 runs in a test, they lost 0-3 on their first away tour in Australia. Tendulkar was the only player from the Indian team who could convince and was named player of the series despite the defeat. After the Indian team also suffered a significant defeat in the following test series in South Africa , Tendulkar made his previous announcement and finally resigned as captain. Sourav Ganguly was his successor .

Core of a "golden generation"

The Indian national cricket team achieved success again under new leadership. The roster of this team was later referred to as the "golden generation" of Indian cricket. The summer of 2000 was marked by the ICC KnockOut 2000 , in which India failed only in the final against New Zealand and Tendulkar himself was fourth-best batsman with 171 runs. Tendulkar asserted that he had not noticed anything about the match-fixing allegations against former captain Mohammad Azhuddin , published in the context of the investigation into the South African Hansie Cronjie , and that he was not incriminated by the investigating authorities. In the winter Tendulkar succeeded against Zimbabwe in the second test of the series with 201 not out, the second double century of his testing career. At the tour against Australia 2000/01 he scored 3 wickets in the second test, which significantly influenced India's victory, as well as his 126 runs in the third test. In the ODI series, he was the first player ever to score the 10,000 ODI run of his career. In the summer, Tendulkar played two multi-national tournaments with India, in which he delivered solid performances.

During the tour of India in South Africa 2001/02 there was a scandal when the match referee Mike Denness Tendulkar interrogated for ball manipulation and suspended him from a test. Following further penalties against the Indian players, the Indian Federation refused to continue accepting the referee. The Indian press condemned the sentences as racially motivated and street protests broke out in India. However, the world association ICC refused to deduct Dennes from the last test. The national federations then announced that they would conduct the test without the referee as an unofficial test by denying Dennes access to the stadium. With 193 runs during the series, Tendulkar was the best batsman on his team. Ultimately, he was acquitted of allegations of ball manipulation by the world federation. On the tour in the West Indies he achieved his 29th Test Century and thus equaled the record of Don Bradman , with whom he was often compared. In the summer of the Tour in England he became the sole record holder in the third test with 193 runs in the first innings. In the ICC Champions Trophy 2002 Tendulkar remained pale when India reached the finals. During the home tour against the West Indies , he was again the best batsman of his team in the tests.

After a clear defeat against New Zealand , the 2003 Cricket World Cup was on. Here the Indian team reached the final, mainly through the performance of Tendulkar, where they lost to Australia. Tendulkar scored 669 runs with an average of 66.90. He was also voted the tournament's best player. In autumn 2003 and at the beginning of the tour in Australia , Tendulkar was unable to build on his performance and only achieved an impressive 241 runs again in the last test. During the tour in Pakistan in 2003/04 , India achieved its first victory in a test in Pakistan with its 194 runs and Virender Sehwag's 309 runs, and ultimately also its first series win. He reached his highest run number in a test innings on the Tour of India in Bangladesh in the 2004/05 season when he scored 248 not out in the first test .

In the period that followed, Tendulkar's performance became weaker again. At the end of the 2004/05 season he contracted a tennis elbow and feared that he would end his career after an operation in 2005. It would take until 2007 for him to regain his old strength. In December 2006 he played for the first Twenty20 of the Indian team against South Africa , which was his only played international Twenty20 until the end of his career. The 2007 Cricket World Cup turned into a debacle for India and Tendulkar when they fell behind Sri Lanka and Bangladesh in the preliminary round and were eliminated. He found consistency on the tour of India in Bangladesh in 2007 . He got two test centers. In the following ODI series in England he was again the best batsman of his team, even if he was denied a Century. On the tour against Australia in the 2007/08 season he reached 154 not out and 153 two Centuries.

Tendulkar's batting stats

The last years of his career

From the first season in 2008 he was also active in the Indian Premier League for the Mumbai Indians . The summer of 2008 with the tour in Sri Lanka brought Tendulkar poor results, while he again earned a Century against Australia , England and New Zealand in the 2008/09 season, with another one-day game against New Zealand. The results resulted in India taking the top spot in the ICC Test Championship . Against Australia in November 2009 he scored 175 runs in the hunt for 350 runs of the opponent in the fifth ODI before he was eliminated. His team, which still needed 19 runs in 3 overs, still failed. In the second ODI on the tour against South Africa in February 2010 , he was the first male cricketer to achieve the 200-run mark in one innings with a 200 not out . In Sri Lanka in the summer with 203 runs and in the autumn against Australia with 214 he achieved two more impressive Double Centuries in Test Cricket. He achieved his 51st and last test century in South Africa at the turn of the year 2010/11. The following Cricket World Cup 2011 was Tendulkar's last chance to win the title. Against England and South Africa he earned a century each, even if both games could not be won. In the quarterfinals he reached the mark of 18,000 ODI runs, and in the semifinals against Pakistan he also contributed significantly to the victory. He was eliminated early in the final, but his team was strong enough to win the title anyway.

The next goal for Tendulkar was to achieve his 100th international century. Because of this, he failed several times in the summer and winter tours, and only a year after the World Cup did he succeed in the 2012 Asia Cup against Bangladesh. His form continued to decline, and in late 2012 he announced he was stepping down from ODI cricket. He played two more test series against England and Australia and decided in October 2013 that the upcoming tour of the West Indies in November 2013 should be his last.

The final game of the tour attracted considerable attention and a final century was widely expected for Tendulkar. However, his wicket fell after 74 runs in his 200th Test.

technology

Sachin Tendulkar hits the ball in front of his wicket (2010)

The great strength of Sachin Tendulkar lies in the mental area, which has enabled him to play very consistently at the highest level for more than two decades. As a batsman, despite his relatively small size, he exuded strength and dominance. This was reinforced by his strategic skills, with which he recognized which bowlers to attack and when . By deliberately covering up his weaknesses, he enticed bowlers to throw balls that corresponded to his strengths. The ability to speed up and slow down his game whenever he felt it necessary also caused problems for the field teams.

His game was characterized by an offensive style of play. He recognized early on which ball the bowler would play so that he could attack it early. In addition, there was a very good timing and a fundamental looseness in his hands when striking. A good balance of his body, effectiveness in his body movements and high precision in his strokes allowed him to consistently withstand bowlers on the field for a long time. Because he did not have a specific stroke that distinguished him, but rather had a high level of versatility, he was not very predictable for the bowlers.

After his active time

In his autobiography, published about a year after the end of his career, he stated that he used the time primarily for his family. However, he also devoted himself to numerous sporting and social projects. He is the owner of a soccer club, Kerala Blasters FC , which plays in the Indian Super League . In the Premier Badminton League he is the owner of the Bengaluru Blasters . With the symbolic adoption of the village of Puttamraju Kandriga in the state of Andhra Pradesh , he participated in the infrastructural development of a model village. He also takes part in book and film projects about himself.

Awards

Sachin Tendulkar and his wife at Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi 2014

In 1998, Sachin Tendulkar received the highest national Indian award for athletes, the Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna . In 2008 he was awarded the Padma Vibhushan , the second highest civilian merit. After being nominated by President Pratibha Patil , he became a member of the Rajya Sabha , the upper house of the Indian Parliament , in 2012 . In 2012 he received the award as a member of the Order of Australia . As the only athlete to date, he received the highest civilian merit order in India, the Bharat Ratna , in 2014 .

Popularity and reception

Sachin Tendulkar's status in India is often described as "god-like". He is considered the best athlete that India has produced. Its importance for Indian society is seen against the background of the social tensions and developments in India since its international debut in 1989. Since politics in the country was very disorderly during his early phase, he formed an antipole with his fair, performance-related style of play.

His autobiography, which he wrote with the cricket journalist Boria Majumdar, was, according to his publisher, the most successful book in India on the very first day of sale. The book has been criticized for being too impersonal and for avoiding potential controversy. The documentary film biography Sachin: A Billion Dreams , created by James Erskine , also bypassed critical points in Tendulkar's career.

During his active time he had numerous advertising contracts, in which he renounced alcohol and tobacco advertising. This was helped by the fact that Tendulkar managed almost without any high-profile scandals. At the end of his career, his advertising contract volume was estimated at approximately Rs. 120 crore (approx. 15 million euros). Within a year of the end of his career, this volume was reduced to approx. Rs. 75 crore (approx. 9.3 million euros), which led to a general reduction in advertising contracts in the cricket sector by 29% during this period.

Private

Sachin Tendulkar has been married to a doctor since 1995 and has two children with whom he lives in Mumbai. His son Arjun Tendulkar is a member of the Indian U19 team. He is a practicing Hindu and was a follower of Sathya Sai Baba .

literature

Primary

Secondary

  • Devendra Prabhudesai: Hero: A Biography of Sachin Ramesh Tendulkar . Rupa & Co, 2017, ISBN 978-8-1291-4566-6 .
  • Gulu Ezekiel: Sachin: The Story of the World's Greatest Batsman . Penguin Global, 2003, ISBN 0-14-302854-5 .
  • Gulu Ezekiel: The A to Z of Sachin Tendulkar , Penguin Global, 2009, ISBN 978-81-7476-530-7 .
  • Vijay Santhanam, Shyam Balasubramanian: If Cricket Is a Religion, Sachin Is God , HarperCollins India, 2009, ISBN 978-81-7223-821-6 .

Filmography

Web links

Commons : Sachin Tendulkar  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

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  2. Sachin Tendulkar: Bio, Facts . Celebrity Bio, Facts. Retrieved May 30, 2017.
  3. a b Sachin Tendulkar: Humble master ( English ) Independent. June 25, 2009. Retrieved July 29, 2017.
  4. My mother started 'Sachin-Sachin' chant, recalls Tendulkar ( English ) Deccan Chronicle. May 10, 2017. Retrieved July 29, 2017.
  5. a b c Devendra Prabhudesai: Hero: A Biography of Sachin Ramesh Tendulkar . Rupa Publications India, 2017, ISBN 978-81-291-4566-6 .
  6. Sachin Tendulkar: career in numbers ( English ) The Telegraph. November 16, 2013. Retrieved July 29, 2017.
  7. ^ Gulu Ezekiel: Sachin The Story of the World's Greatest Batsman . Penguin, 2012, ISBN 978-0-14-341758-3 , pp. 4 .
  8. Vaibhav Purandare: Sachin Tendulkar - A Definitive Biography . Roli Books, 2005, ISBN 978-81-7436-360-2 .
  9. a b c d Harsha Bhogle: Is Sachin Tendulkar the greatest schoolboy cricketer ever? ( English ) Cricinfo. November 12, 2009. Retrieved July 29, 2017.
  10. ^ Gulu Ezekiel: Sachin The Story of the World's Greatest Batsman . Penguin, 2012, ISBN 978-0-14-341758-3 , pp. 23 .
  11. Gulu Ezekiel: Schoolboy Prodigy ( English ) Hindustan Times. Archived from the original on October 25, 2012. Retrieved July 29, 2017.
  12. ^ Gulu Ezekiel: Sachin The Story of the World's Greatest Batsman . Penguin, 2012, ISBN 978-0-14-341758-3 , pp. 24 .
  13. Rahul Bhatia: A tale of two terrors ( English ) Cricinfo. August 21, 2004. Retrieved July 29, 2017.
  14. ^ Gulu Ezekiel: Sachin The Story of the World's Greatest Batsman . Penguin, 2012, ISBN 978-0-14-341758-3 , pp. 25 .
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  16. Teenagers eclipse Tendulkar-Kambli record ( English ) Cricinfo. November 16, 2006. Retrieved July 29, 2017.
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  21. Sachin Tendulkar greatest batsman to have played cricket: Dennis Lillee ( English ) Times of India. June 26, 2012. Retrieved July 29, 2017.
  22. ^ Gulu Ezekiel: Sachin The Story of the World's Greatest Batsman . Penguin, 2012, ISBN 978-0-14-341758-3 , pp. 22 .
  23. ^ Ranji Trophy West Zone League, 1988/89 ( English ) Cricinfo. Retrieved July 29, 2017.
  24. Bharath Seervi: Shaw, second-youngest centurion for Mumbai after Tendulkar ( English ) Cricinfo. January 5, 2017. Retrieved July 29, 2017.
  25. 200 facts about Sachin Tendulkar ahead of his 200th Test ( English ) Deccan Chronicle. January 10, 2016. Retrieved July 29, 2017.
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  27. Batting - Most Runs ( English ) Cricinfo. Retrieved July 29, 2017.
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  37. ^ Graham Otway: England v India 1990: Second Cornhill Test . In: Graeme Wright (ed.): Wisden Cricketers Almanack 1991 . John Wisden & Co Ltd, 1991, ISBN 978-0-947766-16-0 ( Wisden Almanack Archive ).
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This version was added to the list of articles worth reading on January 5, 2019 .