An awe inspiring estimate of Tendulkar
15 June 2001
Sachin Tendulkar will amass 20,480 runs and 81 centuries in the next
10 years if he maintains his present form, according to an assessment
by Wisden Cricket Monthly.
In the past 27 months since February 1999, Tendulkar had piled up 1720
runs in 15 Tests at a near Bradmanesque average of 71.67, it said.
Should Tendulkar continue at that rate in the next decade, playing 12
Tests a year and finally hang up his boots at the age of 38, he will
have amassed 20,480 and 81 centuries in 202 Tests.
His average will be a cool 66.06, placing him all alone on a unique
second tier of champion batsmen - still behind Bradman (99.94) but
distinctly ahead of Graeme Pollock, George Headley and Herbert
Sutcliffe (60-odd), Wisden wrote.
The jury is still out on whether he would have outbudgeoned Don
Bradman if he had been around in the run-thirsty 1930s, but the Indian
maestro had two sweet statistics to savour on his 28th birthday in
April, Wisden writes in a piece headlined "Tendulkar the Great (and
getting greater)".
It went on to cite that Tendulkar's had been the 28 most prolific
years and 27 of the most prodigious months in the history of batting.
Pointing out that on his birthday, Tendulkar's record in limited overs
Internationals stood at 10,179 runs and 28 hundreds - twice as good as
any one else at the same age, the magazine says that in Tests, his
omnipotence is equally jaw-dropping. He was 1676 runs clear of the
previous record held by Javed Miandad and his 25 Test centuries dwarf
the 15 made at the same age by Bradman and Neil Harvey, his nearest
rivals.
Wisden writes that average-wise Tendulkar still trails the Don who
made 3849 runs at 98.69 by his 28th birthday. But even that gap was
closing.
© PTI