Sachin Tendulkar
The final word should be Sachin Tendulkar's
Since the Mumbai Test, where Sachin Tendulkar
endured twin failures, falling to the left-arm spin of Monty Panesar in
both innings, there has been speculation over whether Tendulkar has
had a word with the selectors about his future.
Ten Test innings without crossing 27. No century since the Cape Town
Test against South Africa in 2011. Bowled or lbw seven times in the last
ten hits. These are the statistics doing the rounds in the last couple
of weeks as most of India obsesses over Sachin Tendulkar. Irate fans
have written sharp letters to newspapers, bloggers have had their
unrestrained say and twitter timelines are full of venom.
Sadly,
through the course of the debate, if you can call it that, the focus has
been on Tendulkar, what's good for him, and what he should do, rather
than the Indian team. When any squad is picked, and from it a playing
eleven, the first thing to think about is what gives the team the best
chance of victory.
The situation being what it is today, with
Cheteshwar Pujara and Virat Kohli being young in their roles, and Rahul
Dravid and VVS Laxman having retired, does Tendulkar's presence make a
difference? When you look at how fragile the batting line-up has seemed
post-Dravid and Laxman, the presence of a rock at No. 4 becomes that
much more valuable.
Since the Mumbai Test, where Tendulkar
endured twin failures, falling to the left-arm spin of Monty Panesar in
both innings, there has been speculation over whether Tendulkar has had a
word with the selectors about his future. Sunil Gavaskar, appearing as
an expert on television, suggested that it would be good for Tendulkar
to keep the selectors abreast of his short and medium-term plans, but
he's the only one on record on the subject.
Tendulkar,
understandably, has made no comment on whether he's had a conversation
with the selectors, and not one of the selectors have confirmed that a
retirement conversation has been had with Tendulkar. Office bearers of
the Board of Control for Cricket in India only get involved, even than
in an unofficial capacity, in the rarest of rare cases when it comes to
selection. At the moment, though, there is no directive from top Board
officials to the selectors on the issue.
And, if you think about
it with a clear head, there is no need, either. Tendulkar has never once
been dropped in his 23-year international career, and has endured
similar lean trots in the past, only to come back stronger. Turning 40
next April, Tendulkar hardly has age on his side, but he has managed his
workload sensibly in the recent past, skipping One-Day International
outings from time to time and staying away from Twenty20 Internationals
altogether. There is no recorded history of Tendulkar playing with an
undisclosed injury - there has never been the need for that - and to
begin to doubt him now reeks of ingratitude.
For the sake of
argument, if you concede that Tendulkar did have a word with the
selectors, telling them that he was not about to announce his retirement
at this juncture, and that the decision on his selection was down to
them, it still changes little. After all, as one former selector put it
not long ago: "The only chance of dropping Tendulkar is if his car has
broken down and I'm travelling to Bandra. Then I may drop him home."
Of
the current selection panel, only Rajinder Hans, at 59, did not have a
first-class career that overlapped with Tendulkar's. Roger Binny, at 57,
played till 1992, and Tendulkar was already a four-year veteran then.
Saba Karim made his One-Day International debut under Tendulkar in 1997,
and Vikram Rathour will no doubt remember all the extra nets and
throwdowns Tendulkar gave him on the 1996 tour of England where he
struggled to get going in the Tests. As for Sandeep Patil, he was a
much-discussed figure in the Tendulkar household growing up, and
Tendulkar's association with him, in one capacity or another, spans
decades.
To expect the selectors to drop Tendulkar is beyond the
pale, for that is not how things are done in India. Australia is famous
for taking the hard decisions regarding senior players being cut, and
perhaps it is this that caused Ricky Ponting, enduring a similar drought
to Tendulkar, to announce that he would retire after the Perth Test. In
India, though, there's little chance of Tendulkar being dropped, which
leaves the decision on how long he plays down to the man himself. As
anyone who has played the game knows, choosing when to go, if you have
that luxury, is a deeply personal decision.
On today's date, it
seems everyone has an opinion on when Tendulkar should go, but in
reality, the final word is his, and that is exactly as it should be,
given all he has achieved over the years.
No comments:
Post a Comment