AP Photo/ Aijaz Rahi
Sachin Tendulkar plays a shot during their Asia Cup cricket match against Bangladesh in Dhaka, Bangladesh.
Finally, Sachin's 'Ton of Tons'
Sachin Tendulkar today finally became the first cricketer in the world to score what is being called his "100 international centuries", a non-event really which seemed to have weighed him down for more than the last year.

As writer Mukul Kesavan wrote last year,

The real cricketing illiterates are the people who believe that adding ODI centuries to Test centuries and arriving at a hundred gives you a heroic landmark. It doesn’t. This isn’t just a meaningless statistic, it’s a pernicious one because it equalizes two different orders of achievement...

So why are we going on like idiots about this non-event, this half-wit’s holy grail? Why can’t we be content to celebrate Tendulkar’s real achievement? Fifty-one Test hundreds… say that slowly because no one will ever score more. And if you must celebrate his ODI centuries, do, but as a distinct and separate achievement. There’s no such thing as an international hundred. If you do want to join his Test centuries to some other figure to bulk out his numbers, add them to his 27 first class hundreds: at least those were made in the same four-innings format of the game.

Be that as it may, for Mr Tendulkar himself, the 'non-event' had become a monkey on his back, a mill-stone and not a milestone for him.

Tendulkar, who already has a pile of runs and records to his credit, reached this hundred  when he turned spinner Shakib-ul Hasan towards fine-leg in the Asia Cup match against Bangladesh here.

The star batsman first looked heavenwards and then acknowledged the cheers of his teammates and the crowd by lifting his bat.

Before this match, Sachin had 51 Test Centuries to his name and 48 One Day Centuries.

It was the end of a long wait for the 38-year-old veteran, who had gone 33 innings and a year without a century. He made his 48th ODI ton in a World Cup match against South Africa in Nagpur on March 12.

Since then it had been an agonising wait for the maestro, whose every innings was watched with anticipation.

He came close on quite a few occasion only to miss the milestone so much so that it became a huge monkey on his back and an unwanted distraction during every series that India played.

He was woefully out of form during India's Test and ODI whitewash at the hands of England last year and though he recovered quite a bit in the later series, the hundred was still not coming.

He carried the weight of expectation to what turned out to be a horror tour of Australia. Tendulkar seemed to be in good touch during the Tests but his form waned after he missed a hundred despite coming close a few times.

Following this, he made himself available for the ODI tri-series against Sri Lanka and Australia but there too, the milestone proved elusive.

But the wait finally ended in familiar sub-continental environs.

With an over two decade long career, records are fairly routine for Tendulkar but for the cricketing fraternity every run he scores just adds to the legend that the diminutive right-hander has become.

The champion batsman has perhaps every batting record that is there to be taken under his belt and adding to the countless tally is the historic hundred he scored against England in the post-lunch session.

Much before his debut on November 15, 1989, Tendulkar's precocious talent was there to be seen when he shared an unbeaten 664-run stand with buddy Vinod Kambli in the Lord Harris Shield Inter-School Game in 1988.

The 1989 international debut was far less spectacular, in fact forgettable. A Waqar Younis bouncer left him with a bleeding nose but Tendulkar did not wince and the next two decades saw him punishing bowlers all over the world on all kind of surfaces.

His first Test century came in England next year at Old Trafford and the Mumbaikar rose in stature after the 1991-92 tour of Australia, hitting sublime centuries on a Sydney turner and a Perth minefield.

The rest is history. No existing batting record seemed safe. Other than Brian Lara's Test match highest of 400 not out and first class highest score of 501 not out, every batting record became Tendulkar's.

A staggering 15470 runs scored in 188 Tests at a robust average of 55.44 confirmed Tendulkar's greatness in the longer version of the game.

And in the 462 ODIs he played, a whopping 18,260 (before the Asia Cup match against Bangladesh) were added to his mountain of runs at an average of 44.64.

 Tendulkar is also the only batsman in the world who has scored a double ton in ODIs, a feat he achieved in Gwalior against South Africa in February. This feat was included in 'Times' magazine's top 10 sports moments of the year.

A perfect teamman, Tendulkar has limited his Twenty20 ambition to the Indian Premier League where he leads Mumbai Indians, ruling himself out of national reckoning lest it upsets the existing equilibrium of the side.

The biggest compliment to his batting came from Sir Donald Bradman himself in 1999 when he said that Tendulkar's style of playing resembled his style. "That touch I used to feel when I batted," he had said.

Tendulkar's colossal batting exploits have completely overshadowed his utility as a part-time bowler who reveled in breakthroughs.

He was a complete enigma with the ball, sending down military medium pace, orthodox leg-break and off-spin with the guiles that often caught batsmen off their guard.

His 45 Test wickets and 154 scalps in ODIs underline the fact that Tendulkar could have also staked claim to be that elusive all-rounder that India has been desperately looking for since the legendary Kapil Dev. But shoulder problems have not allowed him to bowl as much as he and the team would have liked.

In the field, he is among the safest pair of hands in the slip and his flat throw releasing strong arm saw him manning the deep with equal aplomb. He has taken 113 catches in Test cricket and 140 in the ODIs.

The aura only grew in strength because of his impeccable demeanour, on and off the field.

His father's death had a deep impact on him and Tendulkar still looks heavenwards whenever he crosses a milestone to seek his blessing.
Emerging story. Watch this space for updates as more details come in
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14/D-85
Mar 21, 2012
03:30 PM

There will be more clamour for BHARAT RATANA for him. He may not get it but he can certainly add another 100 crore for Endorsements.

JATINDER SETHI, GURGAON
13/D-44
Mar 21, 2012
07:35 AM

 What! Drop Sachin! BCCI could not even drop Ravi Shastri with his SOLID batting. He left only after his portraits were garlanded with slippers in street corners of Bombay. Sachin ofcourse is much superior. 

Kalpana Bala, Mumbai
12/D-37
Mar 21, 2012
06:16 AM

SACHIN makes his 100th 100 and India is out of ASIAN CUP!!!! Indians want India to win and individual scores are irrilavent. SACHIN who is past his prime is retained in the team for his previous achievements India will suffer more defeats. So BCCI could organise a few matches with Nepal, Bhutan, Afghnanistan, China, Somalia etc so that SACHIN can score to his hearts content and then made to retire. 

Charan dewry, Guwahati
11/D-56
Mar 20, 2012
02:38 PM

There is an old saying:

When the horse cant run ...it gets shot !!!

Jo Mb, kolkata
10/D-27
Mar 20, 2012
10:17 AM

Now, the jokers of the media will hype up his 100th fifty or 50th one-day century! Who cares if India loses a match or two due to his go-slow-for-milestone batting!!

The Irreverent Indian, Online
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