Sachin Tendulkar announces retirement from
One day Internationals
Sachin Tendulkar has retired from ODI cricket.
Tendulkar finishes an illustrious career in the 50-over format, having played
463 ODIs, scored 18,426 runs and made 49 centuries, each of them a world
record. His last ODI was against Pakistan in Dhaka during the Asia Cup, where
he made a half-century in India's victory.
"I have decided to retire from the One Day
format of the game," he said in a statement. "I feel blessed to have
fulfilled the dream of being part of a World Cup winning Indian team. The
preparatory process to defend the World Cup in 2015 should begin early and in
right earnest. I would like to wish the team all the very best for the future.
I am eternally grateful to all my well wishers for their unconditional support
and love over the years."
Tendulkar made his ODI debut on his first
international tour, in 1989, against Pakistan in Gujranwala, where he got a
duck. He scored his first half-century in his ninth ODI and made an immediate
impact when promoted to open the batting in 1994, in an ODI against New Zealand
in Auckland, where he smashed 82 in 49 balls. His first century took 79 ODIs to
arrive but he kept piling them on with remarkable consistency.
Some of the batting highlights in his ODI career
include back-to-back hundreds against Australia in 1998 in a triangular
tournament in Sharjah, finishing as the highest run-getter in the 2003 World
Cup in South Africa, and becoming the first batsman to score a double-century
in the ODI format, against South Africa in February 2010.
He was part of one of India's greatest ODI
achievements over the last three decades, when they won the World Cup in 2011,
beating Sri Lanka in the final on his home ground in Mumbai - it was his last
ODI in India. In preparation for that World Cup, Tendulkar had curtailed the
amount of ODI cricket in the year playing only four ODIs in the 12 months
before the tournament. Since the end of the World Cup, Tendulkar has played 10
ODIs, seven in the CB Series against Australia and the last three of his career
being played at the Asia Cup in Dhaka. His innings of 114 against Bangladesh on
March 16 was his 100th international hundred in what turned out to be
Tendulkar's penultimate ODI match for India.
Tendulkar's announcement of his ODI retirement
came through a statement from the BCCI which stated that he had spoken to BCCI
president N Srinivasan. His retirement was announced on the day the Indian
selectors picked the teams to play in the five-match T20 and ODI series against
Pakistan.
"It was not sudden. He informed us before
the selection about his decision," Sanjay Jagdale, the BCCI secretary,
told reporters. "He spoke to me and the president about his decision.
Naturally he must have been (emotional) I can't say we just spoke on the
phone."
"What he has expressed is his concern that
India has to prepare for the next World Cup," the BCCI's chief
administrative officer Ratnakar Shetty added. "From that point of view, he
felt that it was time that he retired."
Courtesy:
espncricinfo.com
Cricket is an intense physically stressful game and howsoever great one cannot continue playing for ever. It is not Politics where seniority keeps gets adding to one's delivery. I am also a fan of Sachin but am feeling let down by the way he announced the most talked about thing i.e., retirement. had I been in place I would have made the announcement in a public gathering of select gathering and what can be better than a stadium where he first got the fan following. Shooting a plain letter to BCCI is like a resignation from job that one held for long and not something that can be dissociation from a passion that one lived (himself) and others used to look at him with. I am forced to believe that he was not selected for Pak team one dayers and he left the letter to BCCI and went on holidays to avoid media and fans.
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