Showing posts with label Sachin Tendulkar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sachin Tendulkar. Show all posts

Books of Sachin Tendulkar

Friday, 11 October 2013



The Mind Game of Cricket by Dr. David Iddon and Sachin Tendulkar

The Devil's Pack: The Men Behind the '83 Victory by Balvinder Singh Sandhu, Austin Coutinho, Sachin Tendulkar

Sachin: Born to Bat by Khalid A-H Ansari, Clayton Murzello, Sachin Tendulkar

Sachin Tendulkar: A Definitive Biography by Vaibhav Purandare

Sachin: The Story of the World's Greatest Batsman by Gulu Ezekiel

Prasidh Uktiyan & Sachin Tendulkar (Combo Pack of 2 books) by Om Prakasha and PARAG PRAKASHAN

Sachin Tendulkar: Greatness and Where He Fell Short by Shantanu Kamat

Sachin Tendulkar: The Ton Machine by Sam Rodrigues

Sachin Tendulkar: The world's greatest batsman (Guardian Shorts) by John Stern and The Guardian

5 feet 5 inch Run Machine - Sachin Tendulkar by Amit. B. Kalantri

The A-Z of Sachin Tendulkar by Gulu Ezekiel

Master Stroke: 100 Centuries of Sachin Tendulkar by Neelima Athalye

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Accomplishments of Sachin Tendulkar

Sachin Tendulkar is regarded as the best batsman in the world has made many records, accomplished many achievements and received many awards in his cricket career. Following is a list of his achievements he made in his career till date.

Records of Sachin Tendulkar



Test cricket

  • Sachin was the third youngest debutant (16 years 205 days) in test cricket.
  • Highest run scorer in the history of Test cricket with 15,638 Test runs (as on 6 December 2012)
  • His career average from 1989 to 2012 is 193 Tests, 15,638 runs at 54.68
  • He became the first Indian to surpass the 11,000 Test run mark
  • Sachin and Brian Lara are the fastest to score 10,000 runs in 195 innings
  • Scored world record of 8705 runs in Tests away from home
  • Scored world record of 29 Centuries in Tests away from home
  • First player to reach 12,000-13,000-14,000-15,000 Test runs
  • Record for scoring most 1,000 Test runs in a calendar year six times
  • Fourth highest run-getter in a single calendar year in Test History
  • Created a world record for aggregating most runs in the fourth innings
  • The only cricketer to score 100 centuries in International Cricket (Test and ODI)
  • Scored his 100th century on 16th March 2012 in the Asia Cup during the 4th ODI against Bangladesh
  • Highest number (51) of Test centuries
  • Highest number (20) of 150+ score in Test Cricket
  • When he scored his maiden century in 1990, he was the second youngest to score a century.
  • His record of 5 centuries before he turned 20 year is a current world record
  • Holds the current record of 217 against New Zealand for the highest score in Test cricket by an Indian when captaining in the 1999/2000 Season
  • Has scored centuries against all Test playing nations

ODI cricket

  • Played 463 matches and made 185 consecutive ODI appearances
  • Sachin was the second youngest debutant in ODI cricket
  • Sachin holds the record for being the first batsman to score the most runs (200) in an ODI Innings
  • Scored the most runs (18426 runs in 452 innings) in ODI cricket
  • The only player ever to cross the 14,000-15,000-16,000-17,000 and 18,000 run marks
  • First player to reach 10,000-11,000-12,000-13,000-14,000-15,000-16,000-17,000 and 18,000 ODI runs
  • Scored the most (49) centuries
  • Sachin and Virender Sehwag are the only cricketers ever to score a double hundred in ODI
  • Most ODI runs (1,894) in a calendar year 1998
  • Most centuries (9) in a calendar year 1998
  • Sachin along with Sourav Ganguly hold the world record for the maximum number of runs scored by the opening partnership
  • Sachin along with Rahul Dravid hold the world record for the highest partnership in ODI matches
  • Has been involved in six 200 run partnerships in ODI matches
  • Most runs (2,278) in World Cup Cricket
  • Player Of The World Cup Tournament in the 2003 Cricket World Cup
  • Opened Batting 340 times in ODI cricket
  • Most overall runs in international cricket (ODIs+Tests+Twenty20)
  • Record of getting out the maximum number of times in the 90s in international matches

Awards and Achievements

  • 1994: Arjuna Award Recipient for achievements in Cricket
  • 1997: One of the five cricketers selected as Wisden Cricketer of the Year
  • 1997/98: Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna - India's highest sporting honour
  • 1999: Padma Shri - India's fourth highest civilian award
  • 2003 - The "Greatest Sportsman" of the country in the Best of India poll by Zee News
  • 2006 - One of the Asian Heroes by Time magazine
  • 2006 - Sports person of the Year
  • 2008: Padma Vibhushan - India's second highest civilian award
  • 2009 - Time magazine included Sachin's Test Debut in Top 10 Sporting Moments
  • 2010: LG People's Choice Award
  • 2010: ICC Cricketer of the year - Highest award in the ICC listings
  • 2010 - Sports Icon of the Year for 21 years at the NDTV Indian of the Year Awards
  • 2010 - One of the world's 100 most influential people in "The 2010 TIME 100" poll by Time magazine
  • 2004, 2007 and 2010: ICC World ODI XI
  • 2009, 2010 and 2011: ICC World Test XI
  • 1997, 2010 and 2012: Wisden Leading Cricketer in the World
  • Sachin has won a record 16 Man of the Series and 62 Man of the Match awards in ODI Matches
  • Sachin has the distinction of having won Man of the Match Award against all ICC Full Members (Test Playing Nations)
He is the only player of current generation who was included by Sir Don Bradman in his squad of playing eleven. And rated him the best among cricketer of his generation.

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Quotes of Sachin Tendulkar


Any active sportsman has to be very focused; you've got to be in the right frame of mind. If your energy is diverted in various directions, you do not achieve the results. I need to know when to switch on and switch off: and the rest of the things happen around that. Cricket is in the foreground, the rest is in the background.

As a kid I loved John McEnroe. They called me Mac because, while everyone else liked Borg, I was crazy about McEnroe. I tried wearing headbands and sweatbands, and whooping at people. It didn't quite work.

At least with me, the match starts much, much earlier than the actual match.

At the start of my career, when I used to toss and turn at night, I was fighting that feeling and wanting to go to sleep. Now I know that's normal, so I'll just get up and watch TV or something. I know it's just my subconscious mind getting ready for a game.

Beating Pakistan is always special because they are a tough team and we have a bit if a history regarding Pakistan.

Before coming here I had a minor back problem and I thought whenever I play Pakistan I get a back problem. Before you lay a foundation on the cricket field, there should be a solid foundation in your heart and you start building on that. After that as you start playing more and more matches, you learn how to score runs and how to take wickets.

Critics haven't taught me my cricket, and they don't know what my body and mind are up to.

Every individual has his own style, his own way of presenting himself on and off the field.

I always had a dream to play for India but I never let it put pressure on me.

I am a sportsman and not a politician. I am a sportsman and will always remain one. I am not going to enter politics giving up cricket, which is my life. I will continue to play cricket.

I believe every era has its significance and the same holds true for players and coaches.

I feel it's the conscious mind that messes things up. The conscious mind is constantly telling you, this might happen or that might happen, even before it has happened. Your conscious mind tells you the next ball might be a out-swinger, but when it's coming at you you realize it's an in-swinger... so literally, you've played two balls.

I feel when somebody has been playing cricket for a long time, he creates a separate identity for himself.

I get 0.5 seconds to react to a ball, sometimes even less than that. I can't be thinking of what XYZ has said about me. I need to surrender myself to my natural instincts. My subconscious mind knows exactly what to do. It is trained to react. At home, my family doesn't discuss media coverage.

I grew up looking at my father as to how to behave. In watching him I grasped so many things. His own temperament was of a calm person. He was very composed and I never saw anger in him. To me, that was fascinating.

I hate losing and cricket being my first love, once I enter the ground it's a different zone altogether and that hunger for winning is always there.

I have never believed in comparisons, whether they are about different eras, players or coaches.

I have never thought where I will go, or forced any targets on myself.

I have never tried to compare myself to anyone else.

I just keep it simple. Watch the ball and play it on merit.

I just want to continue the way I am going.

I never played with a runner in my entire life, even in schools, because only I know where the ball is going and how hard, when I hit the ball, something my runner will never know about.

I want to give my six hours of serious cricket on the ground and then take whatever the result.

If efforts to do social work are couched in selfish motives, then they will die a premature death. Why would my efforts get politicised? I have values I inherited from my father. He helped many. Anyone, even a postman knocking on our door would get a glass of water and some sweets.

If one man is representing India in cricket, then yes, blame that person when things go wrong.

I'm really focusing now on how I can get to the next level as a batsman. How can I get even more competitive? How can I get even more consistent? How can I get better?

Isn't cricket supposed to be a team sport? I feel people should decide first whether cricket is a team game or an individual sport.

It doesn't always happen according to the way you have planned things out but I feel if you have covered most of the aspects, it does help out there in the middle.

It has been very good here, but the World Cup game was different. It had a different significance to it.

My point of view is that when I am playing cricket I cannot think that this game is less or more important.

Schools across India do not have teachers, libraries, playing grounds and even toilets. I do not want to see empty classrooms, empty libraries. I do not want to see cattle grazing on fields meant to be cricket or football grounds.

There are a few players who don't like to think about the game.

There are over 200 million illiterate women in India. This low literacy negatively impacts not just their lives but also their families' and the country's economic development. A girl's lack of education also has a negative impact on the health and well-being of her children.

When I was 15, I started playing first class cricket and always dreamt of being a Test cricketer, wanted to do something for the country, married in 1995, have 2 kids it's been great.

When there is time to think about cricket, I think but when there is time to be with family, I try to do justice to that aspect of my life as well.

More on Sachin :
Sachin's emotional speech on retirement against WI after 200 Test
Birth of Sachin Tendulkar
Quotes of Sachin Tendulkar
History of Sachin Tendulkar
About Sachin Tendulkar
Family of Sachin Tendulkar
comments | | Read More...

History of Sachin Tendulkar

1973: Sachin Tendulkar was born on 24th April, 1973 to Rajni Tendulkar and Ramesh Tendulkar. He was born at Nirmal Nursing Home, Bombay, India.

1988: Unbeaten World Record Partnership with Vinod Kambli. Tendulkar (14) and Vinod Kambli (16) compile a 664-run unbroken partnership for Shardashram Vidya Mandir against St Xavier's at Azad Maidan, Mumbai. Kambli remains ubeaten on 349 not out and Tendulkar scores 326 not out. It remains the highest partnership recorded in any form of cricket, until in November 2006. Sachin in his own words - "This season was extraordinary, scoring a century in every innings was overwhelming. An unbroken 664-run partnership in a Lord Harris Shield inter-school game with Kambli. Representing Shardashram Vidyamandir against St Xavier's at Azad Maidan I scored 326 not out while Kambli was unbeaten at 349."

1989: Youngest cricketer picked by the Indian Team. He made his One-Day International in Gujranwala against Pakistan. In the final Test of the series in Sialkot,he got hit on the nose by a bouncer bowled by Waqar Younis, but he deliberately declined medical assistance and continued to bat and he scored 57.

1990: At the of 17 years and 112 days, becomes the then second-youngest to score a Test century. He scores 119 not out against England at Old Trafford which helped India to get a draw.

1992: Signs up for Yorkshire and becomes the first overseas signing for the English county.

1993: First hundred on home soil. In another match with South Africa needing six runs to win off the last over of their Hero Cup semifinal, he bowls a sensational over, conceding just three and bowling India to victory.

1994: Opens in ODI for the first time in March 1994 in Auckland against New Zealand. He made 82 in just 49 balls. In September, 1994 he made his first ODI century -110 against Australia.

1995: Becomes the richest cricketer in the world after he signs up a five-year contract worth Rs.31.5 crore with WorldTel.

1996: Scores 110 in his first match as India's ODI captain, against Sri Lanka in Colombo.

1997: Hits 97-ball 104 in Feb 1997 against Zimbabwe in Benoni to help India chase down 241 within 40 overs and qualify for the final of the tri-series.

1998: Opening the innings after losing the national captaincy to Mohammad Azharuddin, hits a 26-ball 41 as India chase down 314 against Pakistan in the final of the Independence Cup in Dhaka. It was then the highest run-chase in the history of ODI cricket.

Scores back-to-back hundreds against Australia in April 1998 at Sharjah to first help India qualify for the final, and eventually win the Coca-Cola cup.

Picks up 5 for 32, his best bowling returns, against Australia in Kochi to give India a 41-run win.

1999: After his father expires in May 1999, Sachin misses a game in the World Cup in England. Comes back to score an unbeaten 140 against Kenya. He said "An emotional century as I returned into the game just after few days of losing my father."

Scores an unbeaten 186 against New Zealand in Hyderabad. It was to be his highest ODI score till February 2010. Puts on 331 for the second wicket with Rahul Dravid, which remains to be the highest partnership for any wicket in ODI cricket.

2000: Sachin scored an all-important 146 as India put themselves in command over Zimbabwe. An Indian victory was on the cards but a gutsy innings by Andy Flower took the game away from India.

The brilliant 146 by the Little Master was filled with 17 hits to the fence and propelled India to 284 in their 50 overs. This was later overshadowed by a magnificent partnership between the Flower brothers for Zimbabwe, who chased down the target with 1 ball to spare and 1 wicket in hand."

2001: First player to score 10,000 ODI runs in March 2001. He scored 139 runs against Australia in Indore.

2002: Surpassed Don Bradman's tally of 29 Test centuries. Misses double-century by seven at Headingley, but India win by an innings and 46 runs.

2003: Scores 673 runs at 61.18 in the World Cup and also takes India to sniffing distance of winning the crown. His 98 against Pakistan was one of the best knocks played by Indians at World Cup. Australia are the champions, but Tendulkar is named the Man of the Series.

2004: He gets his highest individual score 241* on Australian soil.

2005: Undergoes surgery for tennis elbow and subsequently misses triangular series in Sri Lanka, a tour of Zimbabwe and the Super Series in Australia.

2006: Undergoes another surgery in England and misses the ODIs against England and the tour of West Indies.

2007: In May 2007 he rested for the first time in his career, for the three-ODI series against Bangladesh.

2008: Scores his first ODI century in Australia in the first of the CB series finals, and plays an important role in India winning a title Down Under for the first time since 1985.

2009: Crosses 17,000 ODI runs during his 141-ball 175 against Australia in Hyderabad. India fall short by three runs in their chase of 351 runs.

2010: Scores 200 not out (147 balls) against South Africa in Gwalior. Becomes the first batsman in the history of ODI cricket to score a double century.

2011: 15000 runs mark is achieved in Test Cricket. 18,000 ODI runs. Won World Cup.

2012: He took the Oath as the Rajya Sabha Member. He achieved 100th hundred milestone in this year.

2013: On 10th Oct, 2013 Tendulkar announces his retirement from Test cricket. Sachin in his own words "All my life I have had a dream of playing cricket for India. I have been living this dream every day for the last 24 years. It’s hard for me to imagine a life without playing cricket because it’s all I have ever done since I was 11 years old. It’s been a huge honour to have represented my country and played all over the world. I look forward to playing my 200th Test Match on home soil, as I call it a day.

I thank the BCCI for everything over the years and for permitting me to move on when my heart feels it's time! I thank my family for their patience and understanding. Most of all, I thank my fans and well-wishers who through their prayers and wishes have given me the strength to go out and perform at my best."


More on Sachin :
Sachin's emotional speech on retirement against WI after 200 Test
Birth of Sachin Tendulkar
Quotes of Sachin Tendulkar
History of Sachin Tendulkar
About Sachin Tendulkar
Family of Sachin Tendulkar
comments | | Read More...

About of Sachin Tendulkar



Sachin Ramesh Tendulkar was born on 24th April, 1973 into a Rajapur Saraswat Brahmin family, in Bombay (now Mumbai) India to Rajni Tendulkar and Ramesh Tendulkar. Sachin's name was kept on Sachin Dev Burman who was very famous music director and Ramesh Tendulkar's favourite. Sachin Tendulkar is Indian cricketer.

Sachin Tendulkar went to Sharadashram Vidyamandir high school. He took the training from Ramakant Achrekar, his coach and mentor. In 1988 he set an Unbeaten World Record Partnership with Vinod Kambli. Tendulkar (14) and Vinod Kambli (16) compile a 664-run unbroken partnership for Shardashram Vidya Mandir against St Xavier's at Azad Maidan, Mumbai. Kambli remains ubeaten on 349 not out and Tendulkar scores 326 not out. It remains the highest partnership recorded in any form of cricket, until in November 2006. Sachin in his own words - "This season was extraordinary, scoring a century in every innings was overwhelming. An unbroken 664-run partnership in a Lord Harris Shield inter-school game with Kambli. Representing Shardashram Vidyamandir against St Xavier's at Azad Maidan I scored 326 not out while Kambli was unbeaten at 349."

There are many awards credited to him for his wonderful career in the cricket. Among innumerable records, he holds the most one day international and test centuries requires the special mention. He achieved 15000 runs mark in Test Cricket and 18,000 in ODI runs in 2011. >> Read More Accomplishments

Sachin met Anjali Mehta (daughter of Gujarati industrialist Anand Mehta) by some mutual friends and went on to become good friends. Anjali is the paediatrician by profession. In 1995, he married her. They have a daugther, Sara who was born in October 1997 and Arjun who was born in September 2000.

Though he is very active with regards to charity but he is reluctant to speak about it. Media keeps showing interest on knowing the inside story of Sachin. However he has always maintained silence in this regard. He prefers to keep it to himself his private life.

More on Sachin :
Sachin's emotional speech on retirement against WI after 200 Test
Birth of Sachin Tendulkar
Quotes of Sachin Tendulkar
History of Sachin Tendulkar
About Sachin Tendulkar
Family of Sachin Tendulkar
comments | | Read More...

Facts of Sachin Tendulkar



Facts of Sachin Tendulkar's early years

Sachin's name was kept on Sachin Dev Burman who was very famous music director and Ramesh Tendulkar's (father of Sachin Tendulkar) favourite.

Tendulkar often used to fight with fellow children during the school time. It is not wrong to say that he was prankster. Sachin once put a hose pipe into Sourav Ganguly's room and turned the tap on.

Likes to dunk his glucose biscuits into his tea and have them with a spoon.

In school, he was once mistaken for a girl by good friend Atul Ranade because of his long curls

Sachin was introduced to cricket by his brother Ajit Tendulkar in 1984. When young Sachin fell from a tree on a Sunday evening during his summer vacation, while Guide was shown on national TV, his infuriated brother (and mentor) Ajit sent him to cricket coaching class as punishment.

Sachin Tendulkar used to sleep with his cricket gear during his junior days.

Colony watchman's son Ramesh Pardhe, who was his playmate, said Sachin would ask him to dip a rubber ball in water and hurl it at him. He wanted to see the wet marks left on the bat to find out whether he had middled the ball correctly

Facts of Sachin Tendulkar's love

Sachin loved tennis apart from cricket. Sachin's idolised - John McEnroe. Sachin in his own words - As a kid I loved John McEnroe. They called me Mac because, while everyone else liked Borg, I was crazy about McEnroe. I tried wearing headbands and sweatbands, and whooping at people. It didn't quite work.

Sachin Tendulkar loves collecting perfumes and watches.

Sachin Tendulkar once told a Marathi news channel in an interview that his weakness is 'vada-pao', a popular Maharashtrian snack. He used to compete with Vinod Kambli and Salil Ankola and say - 'I-can-eat-more-vada-pavs-than-you'

Sachin loves Kishore Kumar and rock group Dire Straits.

Sachin is so possessive about his Ferrari that wife Anjali is not allowed to drive it.

Sachin met Anjali Mehta (daughter of Gujarati industrialist Anand Mehta) by some mutual friends and went on to become good friends. Anjali is the paediatrician by profession. In 1995, he married her. They have a daugther, Sara who was born in October 1997 and Arjun who was born in September 2000.

Loves sea food. Owned a restaurant.

Facts of Sachin Tendulkar's Cricket Career

From the cricket world, Sachin was first met to famous cricket coach - Ramakant Achrekar. Ramakant Achrekar used to give coins to Sachin if he could play the entire session of nets without being dismissed. Tendulkar has won 13 coins from Ramakant. He still treasure all those coins.

Sachin Tendulkar batted in his debut Test against Pakistan wearing the pads gifted to him by Sunil Gavaskar. Sachin Tendulkar's debut Test also was legendary allrounder Kapil Dev's 100th.

During an under-15 tour in Indore, he couldn't sleep and woke up in the middle of the night to shadow practice. As the flooring was wood-based, the noise that emanated from the bat hitting the flooring disturbed the other tenants. As the hotel manager went to complain to coach Vasu Paranjpe, he was ticked off by the coach and told to 'Go and bowl to him'.

Sachin Tendulkar fielded for Pakistan as a substitute during a one-day practice match against India at the Brabourne Stadium in 1988.

In his debut Test match English fast bowler Alan Mullally complained that Sachin Tendulkar was batting with a bat broader than the normal willow.

Sachin went 79 matches before scoring his first ODI century – by which time he had scored seven Test hundreds

Sachin Tendulkar uses a very heavy bat at the crease, weighing 3.2lbs. Only South Africa's Lance Klusener used a heavier bat in world cricket.

Sachin Tendulkar started off with centuries in his debut matches in the Ranji, Duleep and Irani Trophy.

Sachin Tendulkar has been granted the Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna, Arjuna Award and Padma Shri by the Indian government. He is the only Indian cricketer to get all of them.

Tendulkar has scored most centuries in a calendar year: 9 ODI centuries in 1998. In 1998 he made 1,894 ODI runs, a record for ODI runs by any batsman in a calendar year.

Sachin calls Sourav Ganguly 'Babu Moshai' while Ganguly calls him 'Chhota Babu'. >> Read Accomplishments of Sachin Tendulkar

Remembers every dismissal and even the bowler who dismissed him.

Facts of Sachin Tendulkar's Advertisements, Politics and others

Sachin Tendulkar is India’s first active cricketer to be nominated to the Rajya Sabha.

The first advertisement in which Sachin featured was for a sticking plaster.

The first brand which Sachin Tendulkar endorsed was the health drink ‘Boost.’ He was seen alongside Kapil Dev in many of their ad films, the start of which happened in 1990.

Tendulkar's immense popularity saw him be an early pioneer in India on cricket business dealings, signing a record sports management deal with Worldtel in 1995 worth $5.7million over five years. In 2001 he signed a new deal for $15.2million, switching to Saatchi and Saatchi's ICONIX in 2006 for a deal worth $34.2million over three years

Sachin Tendulkar went to watch the movie Roja in 1995 with a beard and disguise. It all went wrong when his glasses fell off and the crowd in the cinema hall recognized him.

Tendulkar’s first car was a Maruti-800.

comments (1) | | Read More...

Family of Sachin Tendulkar

On this page you will find the details of Sachin Tendulkar family ie family tree of Sachin Tendulkar.

Mother: Rajni Tendulkar. She worked in the insurance industry.

Father: Ramesh Tendulkar. Ramesh Tendulkar was a reputed Marathi novelist.

Ramesh married twice. From his first wife, he had three children Nitin, Ajit and Savit. All three are elder to Sachin.

Wife: Anjali Tendulkar nee Mehta. Sachin met Anjali by some mutual friends. Later they got married on 24th May, 1995. She is a paediatrician by profession. She is the daughter of Anand Mehta (Industrialist) and Annabel Mehta (British Social Worker).

Daughter: Sara Tendulkar was born on 12th October, 1997

Son: Arjun Tendulkar was born on 24th September, 1999

Facts of Sachin Tendulkar

Sachin's name was kept on Sachin Dev Burman who was very famous music director and Ramesh Tendulkar's favourite.

Tendulkar often used to fight with fellow children during the school time.

Sachin was introduced to cricket by his brother Ajit Tendulkar in 1984.

Sachin loved tennis apart from cricket. Sachin's idolised - John McEnroe. Sachin in his own words - As a kid I loved John McEnroe. They called me Mac because, while everyone else liked Borg, I was crazy about McEnroe. I tried wearing headbands and sweatbands, and whooping at people. It didn't quite work.

Sachin first met to famous cricket coach - Ramakant Achrekar. >> Read More


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Last Updated: 12th July, 2013
More on Sachin :
Sachin's emotional speech on retirement against WI after 200 Test
Birth of Sachin Tendulkar
Quotes of Sachin Tendulkar
History of Sachin Tendulkar
About Sachin Tendulkar
Family of Sachin Tendulkar
comments | | Read More...

Birth of Sachin Tendulkar

On this page you will find the details of Sachin Tendulkar. Details include Birth date, Location and his Parents.

Birth Date: 24-April-1973
Location of Birth: Nirmal Nursing Home, Bombay, India
Nick Name: Master Blaster,Tendlya, Little Master, God of Cricket
Sachin Tendulkar was born into a Rajapur Saraswat Brahmin family, in Bombay (now Mumbai) India on April 24, 1973, to Rajni Tendulkar and Ramesh Tendulkar.

Famous Quotes of Sachin Tendulkar

Any active sportsman has to be very focused; you've got to be in the right frame of mind. If your energy is diverted in various directions, you do not achieve the results. I need to know when to switch on and switch off: and the rest of the things happen around that. Cricket is in the foreground, the rest is in the background.

As a kid I loved John McEnroe. They called me Mac because, while everyone else liked Borg, I was crazy about McEnroe. I tried wearing headbands and sweatbands, and whooping at people. It didn't quite work.

At least with me, the match starts much, much earlier than the actual match.

At the start of my career, when I used to toss and turn at night, I was fighting that feeling and wanting to go to sleep. Now I know that's normal, so I'll just get up and watch TV or something. I know it's just my subconscious mind getting ready for a game.

Beating Pakistan is always special because they are a tough team and we have a bit if a history regarding Pakistan. >> Read More

More on Sachin :
Sachin's emotional speech on retirement against WI after 200 Test
Birth of Sachin Tendulkar
Quotes of Sachin Tendulkar
History of Sachin Tendulkar
About Sachin Tendulkar
Family of Sachin Tendulkar
comments | | Read More...
 
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