Time for Sachin to stand up... and be counted
Binnu Babu
The Indian team is in South Africa. What lies ahead
is one of the most crucial periods in the careers of the present generation
of Indian cricketers. There comes a period during which every generation's
achievements and place in history is based on the moment in time upon which
judgement is passed. It is time to stand up and be counted.
There are several spokes that make the wheel India is. John Wright, bringing his modern, unbiased influence on the team (at last seemingly united in purpose); a pace attack you can finally speak of in a confident
tone; a world-class spinning duo; an opening pair finding their footing in
international cricket, and, last but not the least, a wicket-keeper, untouched by
scandal, blessed with the lightness and enthusiasm of youth.
V V S Laxman, Sourav Ganguly and Rahul Dravid -- talented stroke makers in the classical Indian
mould, each a match winner on his day. And then there is Sachin Tendulkar.
Ah! Sachin... sure he made Bradman's all-time eleven, and, for sure, the most talented batsman of the modern era. But, is that enough? You see, none of the plaudits really matter. Even if he scores 20,000 runs and breaks all the existing records, in my book, at least, it won't matter.
Where are the victories? More precisely, will he be able to inspire India to Test rubber victories abroad? Will he cross from being debated upon whether he is or is not better than Steve Waugh and Brian
Lara to the realm of greatness? To the stratosphere occupied by, but very
few men like Don Bradman, Gary Sobers and Viv Richards. Men about whom no
debate is required, no statistic is needed to make your point, whatsoever. Men
whose sublime talents combined with a sheer aura surrounding them, that when
they were on, the rest of the world dimmed in comparison!!
Sachin has that ability - he is a magnet; the world stops to watch him. People who don't understand cricket can't take their eyes off the television -- they are watching a "genius at work". A kind of energy ebbs from his presence. The crowd sense it-- they begin to buzz; the oppositon and the world does too. Every heart beats just a bit faster, everyone's on the edge, and the world's focus is on that lone figure out in the middle. A few other sportsmen had or have it: Michael Jordan, Ayrton Senna, Tiger Woods, Mohammad Ali, Diego Maradonna.
Therefore, I would consider it a gross failure on his part if he were not to convert it into the kind of statistics we today remember the Don, or the swashbuckling calypso of Sobers, or the sheer
arrogant dismissal of a cricket ball, like Richards. Sachin is an amalgamation of their talents, but with the frailties of mind that is all too Indian.
Therefore, it is time for Sachin to end all arguments, to rise above the rest, and take his rightful place among the pantheon of greats - it is time for India to win abroad. He is to India what Clark Kent was to Metropolis. He is our only superman!
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