What's new

[VIDEO] On This Day: November 15, 1989 - Waqar Younis & Sachin Tendulkar make their debut in Karachi

Batting is easy. Fast bowling is all athleticism and strength.

I think it is the other way around. Bowling is slightly easier than batting. I'm not saying anyone can becoming Waqar. To be great batsman, you need to possess abundance of talent. Then with necessary brain and hard work you can get far. You need to face tough bowling oppositions when you are young to get better, you can't practice with guys who role their arms and get better. Bowlers on the other hand can practice by themselves. This is why you see average tennis ball bowlers become international bowlers. Yes you do need to have explosive power at the crease, brain, stamina, endurance and accuracy. But, a bowler can achieve all of them by themselves, do not need to depend on the opposite player being good when practicing. This is why you don't hear fairy tale batsmen stories. Bowlers can develop any time, batsman really cannot. A bowler can go from club cricket to International cricket just like that, but a batsman cannot. I'm not saying, Sachin is better than Waqar because both are different traits. I'm just disagreeing with your statement.
 
It's a political aberration that the Supertests are not official and the inferior "official" ones from that time are.

But Barry Richards spent hundreds of hours of his life playing top-class spin at Hampshire against the best spinners in world cricket at the time - Underwood, Intikhab, Bedi, Edmonds et al. You make a mistake if you choose to ignore that.

Are you seriously telling me facing these spinners in county is same as facing them while representing your country with millions of eyes watching you?

Graeme Hick destroyed spinners and pacers in county cricket. But in international cricket, he was owned by the same bowlers.

Now, Richards might have been miles ahead of Hick but would he have been the same in international cricket, I guess we will never know.
 
As i pointed out in my first post in this thread, Junaid is an opinionated flounder fish. I am fine with him having those biased and judgmental opinions but its waste of time having a discussion with him on any of those as he is unable to back up.
 
You can paint it anyway you want. But we are talking about ATGs in Tests and ODIs and Sachin is the only one apart from Viv who was tremendously successful in both. We don't talk about ATGs in a series which is not even considered official. It may have been tough then but the fact is he didn't play enough tests. He didn't play in dustbowls facing the spin quartet. Now he may have been successful there or he may have failed. But unfortunately for him and for us, he didn't play. So, no he is not better than Sachin/Lara/Kallis/Sobers as an international player. He simply didn't get the chance to prove himself.

If we start rating players on the basis of Supertests and other "unofficial" games, then why not brand current players as T20 ATGs on the basis of IPL/Big Bash performances? Why do you need international cricket then?

POTW for me.
 
You can paint it anyway you want. But we are talking about ATGs in Tests and ODIs and Sachin is the only one apart from Viv who was tremendously successful in both. We don't talk about ATGs in a series which is not even considered official. It may have been tough then but the fact is he didn't play enough tests. He didn't play in dustbowls facing the spin quartet. Now he may have been successful there or he may have failed. But unfortunately for him and for us, he didn't play. So, no he is not better than Sachin/Lara/Kallis/Sobers as an international player. He simply didn't get the chance to prove himself.

If we start rating players on the basis of Supertests and other "unofficial" games, then why not brand current players as T20 ATGs on the basis of IPL/Big Bash performances? Why do you need international cricket then?

Firstly, ODIs only started in 1971.

Secondly, if you want players who were all-time greats in both formats:

Viv Richards
Wasim Akram
Waqar Younis
Sachin Tendulkar
Clive Lloyd
Adam Gilchrist
Shane Warne
"Murali"

That's eight just off the top of my head.

Secondly, to your inflated claims conflating Barry Richards and Graeme Hick.

When Barry Richards played county cricket there was no limit on the number of overseas players in a team. Playing against Gloucestershire meant that you came up against Zaheer Abbas, Sadiq Mohammed and Mike Procter, for example.

Every county side was superior to every international side apart from Australia and the West Indies. County cricket was a higher form of cricket than most Test cricket was.

Graeme Hick played in an era in which the Cricketer's Association, a pro-Apartheid South Africa lobby group, had lobbied the pro-South Africa Thatcher government to restrict work visas for overseas players so each county could only register one overseas player. The result was that the standard of county cricket in the 1980s was massively weaker than in the 1970s.
 
Waqar is more exciting to watch on YouTube than Sachin that's for sure. Fans 20 years down the lane would like what a freak of nature Vicky was :waqar
 
Waqar ended up with 373 Test wickets.

That day in 1989 when he made his debut only one man in history had taken more wickets than that - Richard Hadlee.

So yes, back injuries stopped him from reaching his full potential. But he still had a magnificent career. The only other Asian fast bowlers in history with more than 350 Test wickets at an average of less than 25 (or 24 for that matter) are Imran Khan and Wasim Akram.

In fact, all three have very similar bowling records and they are very hard to separate - they are simply the most successful Test fast bowlers that Asia has ever produced.

Except that Imran was the only one to average below 30 in all the Test countries he bowled in.
 
Statchin gets boring after a while, same shots, same image every time.

Waqar is much more relatable, and was much more thrilling to watch.
 
Sachin hitting Waqar's trademark reverse swinging deliveries for Sixes and Fours.

 
Last edited:
Sorry, but you are showing your youth (or maybe ignorance).

Tests are the second highest form of cricket ever played.

The toughest was the Supertests in 1977-78 and 1978-79. Ask anyone who was there - Imran, Ian Chappell, Dennis Lillee, the great West Indians.

The astonishing thing about Barry Richards is that his record in the Supertests is basically even better than his record in official Tests. He averaged 77.60 the first season and 83.00 the second, in such adverse conditions that Viv Richards averaged 19.33 and Javed Miandad averaged 29.66.

In the 1970s English county cricket was like a First Class version of IPL. All the world's greatest players were there - except Pollock - and we could measure them side by side.

And trust me, from 1970 to 1977 Barry Richards was the world's greatest batsman (as Pollock had been from 1965-1970) and he was then replaced by Viv Richards from 1977-1988.

Sachin was an all-time great, as I keep saying, one of the best 20 batsmen in 140 years. But just because you didn't see Barry Richards doesn't mean that Sachin was in his class, because I'm very sorry but he just wasn't. Barry Richards was so good that he made people like Greg Chappell or Sachin look like Vinay Kumar compared to Dale Steyn.

(And no, it's now wonder Pakistan didn't dominate world cricket in the 1990s. There was too much fixing going on and not enough cricket. Some of the star players then made Asif and Butt look like choirboys, even Qayyum admitted that in and after his report.)

Seriously..???There can't be any argument as absurd as this one.Sachin was head & shoulder above others in toughest era of batting in tests with an avg of 58 in 90s.He was already an ATG at age of 25 itself.
 
Last edited:
Who makes it to most 'World XI' among them? I think you know the answer.

From Bradman's 'World XI', to Benaud's 'Word XI', to Cricinfo's 'World XI', To WISEN's 'World XI', the real question is that can anyone name a 'World XI', without Sachin in it? Wait, I can name one .... Dickie Bird's 'World XI'. Anyother 'World XI' without Sachin in it?

How about ESPN's 'Top 25 Greatest Greatest Greatest Cricketers Of All Time' created in 2001 where Sachin found a place in the 7th spot (ahead of the overhyped Imran Khan, who finished his career way before Sachin, yet found a place below Sachin, who was just halfway throughout his career).
 
Last edited:
Who makes it to most 'World XI' among them? I think you know the answer.

From Bradman's 'World XI', to Benaud's 'Word XI', to Cricinfo's 'World XI', the real question is that can anyone name a 'World XI', without Sachin in it? Wait, I can name one .... Dickie Bird's 'World XI'. Anyother 'World XI' without Sachin in it?

How about ESPN's 'Top 25 Greatest Greatest Greatest Cricketers Of All Time' created in 2001 where Sachin found a place in the 7th spot (ahead of the overhyped Imran Khan, who finished his career way before Sachin, yet found a place below Sachin, who was just halfway throughout his career).
It doesn't matter. Waqar is bigger, stronger, faster, more exciting to watch. Nobody cares about your fantasy lists.
 
It doesn't matter. Waqar is bigger, stronger, faster, more exciting to watch. Nobody cares about your fantasy lists.

It's not my fantasy lists, those lists were being prepared by greats of the game. All of them think that Waqar isn't good enough to tie Sachin's shoe laces, as evident by their opinions and lists.
 
Sachin tendulkar is easliy among the top five batsmen of all time.Only Bradman is ahead and in his own league.The likes of Viv,Sobers,Hobbs and Sachin are all at same level and greatest bats of their era.
 
Obviously die-hard fan of Waqar Younis will be disappointed .... but any 'World XI' will always, always have Sachin in it, while none of them will have a certain 'wannabe' like Waqar in it.

Can anyone name a 'World Xi XI' with Waqar in it? Any chances? HaHaHaHa.....
 
Cute. Waqar should've broke his toes. Probably let him go seeing he was just a little kid.

He did what he could, he couldn't do more damage than that ... yet the 16 year old kid stood up and played and scored a half century. Such a shame for the rest of your super phaast-bowlers.
 
He did what he could, he couldn't do more damage than that ... yet the 16 year old kid stood up and played and scored a half century. Such a shame for the rest of your super phaast-bowlers.

Yeah, that's why Tendulkar avoided him for the next decade.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
On this day 27 years ago, Waqar Younis and Sachin Tendulkar made their debut

On this day exactly 27 years ago at Karachi, two young 'uns aged 18 and 16 from both sides of the border, one a bowling genius and another a batting genius, made their debuts together.

images (16).jpg

images (5).jpg

CxR_01NXAAE_r_A.jpg

CxR_01NXEAE-PHJ.jpg
 
Still find it hard to believe that 16 year olds could play at the test level. Maybe the quality of test cricket wasnt as great in that era as people make out to be ? :)
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">"Time gone quickly" On this day 27 years ago Me & the Great <a href="https://twitter.com/sachin_rt">@sachin_rt</a> made a debut at Karachi. Photos bring back all the wonderful memories <a href="https://t.co/g2Hsm0gk1Z">pic.twitter.com/g2Hsm0gk1Z</a></p>— waqar younis (@waqyounis99) <a href="https://twitter.com/waqyounis99/status/798403588687036420">November 15, 2016</a></blockquote>
<script async src="//platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Playing for the country was always a dream. What a memorable moment it was! Time has flown quickly indeed, but you weren't any slower either <a href="https://t.co/eBm6nhK4pJ">https://t.co/eBm6nhK4pJ</a></p>— sachin tendulkar (@sachin_rt) <a href="https://twitter.com/sachin_rt/status/798441096552546305">November 15, 2016</a></blockquote>
<script async src="//platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Sorry, but you are showing your youth (or maybe ignorance).

Tests are the second highest form of cricket ever played.

The toughest was the Supertests in 1977-78 and 1978-79. Ask anyone who was there - Imran, Ian Chappell, Dennis Lillee, the great West Indians.

The astonishing thing about Barry Richards is that his record in the Supertests is basically even better than his record in official Tests. He averaged 77.60 the first season and 83.00 the second, in such adverse conditions that Viv Richards averaged 19.33 and Javed Miandad averaged 29.66.

In the 1970s English county cricket was like a First Class version of IPL. All the world's greatest players were there - except Pollock - and we could measure them side by side.

And trust me, from 1970 to 1977 Barry Richards was the world's greatest batsman (as Pollock had been from 1965-1970) and he was then replaced by Viv Richards from 1977-1988.

Sachin was an all-time great, as I keep saying, one of the best 20 batsmen in 140 years. But just because you didn't see Barry Richards doesn't mean that Sachin was in his class, because I'm very sorry but he just wasn't. Barry Richards was so good that he made people like Greg Chappell or Sachin look like Vinay Kumar compared to Dale Steyn.

(And no, it's now wonder Pakistan didn't dominate world cricket in the 1990s. There was too much fixing going on and not enough cricket. Some of the star players then made Asif and Butt look like choirboys, even Qayyum admitted that in and after his report.)

Tendulkar has 25K FC runs of which a overwhelmingly high % of runs (62%) are from Test Cricket ... this is the opposite for Barry Richards who has 28K FC runs of which not even 2% are Test Runs. In short there is simply no comparison at all between the two.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Tendulkar has 25K FC runs of which a overwhelmingly high % of runs (62%) are from Test Cricket ... this is the opposite for Barry Richards who has 28K FC runs of which not even 2% are Test Runs. In short there is simply no comparison at all between the two.
I think that's an unfair measure.

Barry Richards played three Test series across Tests and the higher standard of Supertests.

His averages in those three series were:

1969-70: Averaged 72.57 v Australia.
1977-78: Averaged 77.60 v Australia and West Indies
1978-79: Averaged 83.00 v Australia and West Indies.

But you decry his record because he scored 98% of his runs outside international cricket?

What more could he have done!

Meanwhile Sachin averaged almost 20 less, despite playing against inferior opposition for his entire career!
 
Last edited by a moderator:
I think that's an unfair measure.

Barry Richards played three Test series across Tests and the higher standard of Supertests.

His averages in those three series were:

1969-70: Averaged 72.57 v Australia.
1977-78: Averaged 77.60 v Australia and West Indies
1978-79: Averaged 83.00 v Australia and West Indies.

But you decry his record because he scored 98% of his runs outside international cricket?

What more could he have done!

Meanwhile Sachin averaged almost 20 less, despite playing against inferior opposition for his entire career!

Did you see the footage ?

on youtube ... there is footage of SuperTests and footage from the best inngs that Barry played (325 in Aus FC Cricket) . None of which has any evidence of extraordinary cricket like you claim. It is the same old problem of blatant exaggerations. This used to work beautifully till rare video clips started showing up on Youtube and those with an open mind can clearly see what is happening.

In post#30 you say Tendulkar never came close to 100 FC Centuries and ridicule ODI's as though they are useless and the runs/100s made there should not be counted but whereas county cricket was played at a higher level (Because there were overseas players and Slips ??) .... so why don't you tell us how the runs made in county cricket are soo valuable using some real tangible examples (No 3rd hand verbal accounts please ... I know all about them ) There is reasonable amount of video clips on Youtube to judge.

Even if you disregard Tendulkars ODI runs he still has a comparable FC record to Barry ... just 3K runs short but more 100s despite playing a lot less domestic cricket. So now you are going to claim standard of Test Cricket suddenly descended below FC cricket pretty much after Barry retired in the early 80s and just before Tendulkar started playing Test Cricket ? Thats simply not true at all.


And I hope you realize the fallacy of comparing an Avg across 200 Tests with a batting avg across 20 FC matches !
 
Last edited:
remember watching it on TV..Waqar was quick but looked a bit lanky and thin. Sachin looked like one of the slightly older school "bhai's" who were in the first team etc..lol
 
Sachin and Waqar: two icons of the game.

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="es"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">The day changed my life & destiny <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/INDvPAK?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#INDvPAK</a> 1989 <a href="https://t.co/tYwGpHgitJ">https://t.co/tYwGpHgitJ</a></p>— waqar younis (@waqyounis99) <a href="https://twitter.com/waqyounis99/status/930697912555798528?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">15 de noviembre de 2017</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Its sad that Waqar didnt stay free from injuries because the Waqar we saw in 1991 was just freakish but the injury before the WC resulted in him dropping 5mph on average. After the injury he was very good at times but mostly good.
 
<div style="width: 100%; height: 0px; position: relative; padding-bottom: 54.688%;"><iframe src="https://streamable.com/s/rpe8a/krfdsm" frameborder="0" width="100%" height="100%" allowfullscreen style="width: 100%; height: 100%; position: absolute;"></iframe></div>.
 
2 years later and multiple other discussions elsewhere in-between still no answer from [MENTION=132916]Junaids[/MENTION] and the old era fan brigade. Tells you the amount of brainwashing that goes on in cricket. County Cricket in 70s >= Current day Test Cricket :facepalm:

Did you see the footage ?

on youtube ... there is footage of SuperTests and footage from the best inngs that Barry played (325 in Aus FC Cricket) . None of which has any evidence of extraordinary cricket like you claim. It is the same old problem of blatant exaggerations. This used to work beautifully till rare video clips started showing up on Youtube and those with an open mind can clearly see what is happening.

In post#30 you say Tendulkar never came close to 100 FC Centuries and ridicule ODI's as though they are useless and the runs/100s made there should not be counted but whereas county cricket was played at a higher level (Because there were overseas players and Slips ??) .... so why don't you tell us how the runs made in county cricket are soo valuable using some real tangible examples (No 3rd hand verbal accounts please ... I know all about them ) There is reasonable amount of video clips on Youtube to judge.

Even if you disregard Tendulkars ODI runs he still has a comparable FC record to Barry ... just 3K runs short but more 100s despite playing a lot less domestic cricket. So now you are going to claim standard of Test Cricket suddenly descended below FC cricket pretty much after Barry retired in the early 80s and just before Tendulkar started playing Test Cricket ? Thats simply not true at all.


And I hope you realize the fallacy of comparing an Avg across 200 Tests with a batting avg across 20 FC matches !
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-partner="tweetdeck"><p lang="en" dir="ltr"><a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/OnthisDay?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#OnthisDay</a> 1989. Two all-time greats took their bows in the drawn Test between Pakistan and India in Karachi. Sachin Tendulkar aged just 16 years 205 days was bowled for 15 by Waqar Younis who was making his Test debut at the age of 17 years 364 days <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Cricket?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#Cricket</a> <a href="https://t.co/HBEbGeCfN3">pic.twitter.com/HBEbGeCfN3</a></p>— Saj Sadiq (@Saj_PakPassion) <a href="https://twitter.com/Saj_PakPassion/status/1062980042450448384?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">November 15, 2018</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
What a ball that was from Waqar. Late inswing at incredible pace. Nobody did inswinging yorkers like Waqar.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-partner="tweetdeck"><p lang="en" dir="ltr"><a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/OnthisDay?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#OnthisDay</a> 1989. Two all-time greats took their bows in the drawn Test between Pakistan and India in Karachi. Sachin Tendulkar aged just 16 years 205 days was bowled for 15 by Waqar Younis who was making his Test debut at the age of 17 years 364 days <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Cricket?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#Cricket</a> <a href="https://t.co/HBEbGeCfN3">pic.twitter.com/HBEbGeCfN3</a></p>— Saj Sadiq (@Saj_PakPassion) <a href="https://twitter.com/Saj_PakPassion/status/1062980042450448384?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">November 15, 2018</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

SRT looks younger than 16.

Waqar doing what he does best.

Damn. Thanks for posting the video.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="es"><p lang="en" dir="ltr"><a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/OnThisDay?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#OnThisDay</a> in 1989, Sachin Tendulkar and Waqar Younis, aged 16 and 17 respectively, made their Test match debuts against each other in Karachi. <br><br>Two true legends of the game. <a href="https://t.co/lGrPM700ai">pic.twitter.com/lGrPM700ai</a></p>— ICC (@ICC) <a href="https://twitter.com/ICC/status/1062918114772504576?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">15 de noviembre de 2018</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Bad back injuries to EXTREME fast bowlers like Zahid and Bishop broke many hearts.

Waqar was fortunate to comeback and resume his career. Although not as devastating as prior to the injury, he was able to entertain the masses and achieved only what only a few could have after such a setback. Kudos to one of my all time favorite bowlers. Us Pakistani since 80s have seen some wonderful FAST bowlers which some countries can only envy. Where are these types now - Fast, Furious, and hungry to kill opposition.
 
Sachin looks like a child LOL, 2 legends debuting on the same day WOW.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr"><a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/OnthisDay?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#OnthisDay</a> 1989. Two all-time greats took their bows in the drawn Test match between Pakistan and India in Karachi. Sachin Tendulkar aged just 16 years 205 days was bowled for 15 by Waqar Younis who was making his Test debut at the age of 17 years 364 days <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Cricket?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#Cricket</a> <a href="https://t.co/kr3odLjlPz">pic.twitter.com/kr3odLjlPz</a></p>— Saj Sadiq (@Saj_PakPassion) <a href="https://twitter.com/Saj_PakPassion/status/1195257319745114112?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">November 15, 2019</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Frightening being a cricket fan back in the day and imagining what careers these two would go on to have. They literally changed cricket.

Waqar changed ODI bowling forever became one of the greatest ever fast bowlers.

Tendulkar changed the whole damn game, became its biggest star ever by far, brought all the money and religion like madness to it.

Wow.

It's like watching a test matchtomorrow with 16 year old Pakistani pacer against some teenager Aussie batsman at Gabba. Who would ever think two kids would become so huge and impact the game so deeply.
 
Two greats and huge role-models all over the world.

An honour to have watched them throughout their careers.
 
30 years of Sachin Tendulkar: When the Master Blaster underwent baptism by fire in Pakistan

Sachin Tendulkar is arguably the greatest batsman to have ever play the sport. The Master Blaster from India had a decorated career in which he made millions fall in love with cricket and eventually attained a demigod status in India.

Tendulkar was destined for greatness. He broke records at will at the domestic level and went on to make his India debut at the age of 16. Well, he was thrown at the deep end -- Tendulkar made his debut against Pakistan in Karachi.

The pint-sized teenager was asked to face a Pakistani bowling attack that had the likes of Waqar Younis, Wasim Akram, Imran Khan and Abdul Qadir.

Sachin Tendulkar was peppered with bouncers on his debut. The 16-year-old stayed only for 28 minutes and 24 balls in the middle but showed immense grit and fearlessness that would go on to define him in the years to come.

Tendulkar managed just 15 runs on his international debut before he was castled by Waqar Younis, who was also making his international debut in the match in Karachi. Incidentally, Tendulkar did not get to bat again in the Test match.

Recalling his Test debut at India Today's Salaam Cricket, Sachin Tendulkar said he thought his career was over after the performance in Karachi.

"When I went in to bat. I was waiting for the yorker. But Akram kept bowling bouncer. There were no rules on the number of bouncers. And then I thought okay this is how you are welcomed to Test cricket. Akram and Waqar were bowling really fast. I had never faced that kind of pace.

"I thought I was completely out of place. I thought that was my first and last Test. I walked back with a lot of embarrassment and I went to the washroom, I looked at my face in the mirror and thought that was it. I wanted just another opportunity to prove myself," Tendulkar said.

Tendulkar indeed got another opportunity and he made it count. In his 2nd Test in Faisalabad, Tendulkar hung in and faced 174 deliveries for a patient 59. He went on to score one more half-century and two 30-plus scores in the Test series wherein he faced the high-quality Pakistan pace attack.

Heaping rich praise on Sachin Tendulkar, Pakistan great Wasim Akram had said the Pakistan players did not understand the buzz around Tendulkar when they saw him first on the 1989 tour.

"I remember when India were about to come to Pakistan - we heard about a young sensation coming from India. And we thought how could a 16-year-old boy playing Test cricket be so good?

"But he did not react to provocation from our pacers. Top batsmen do not react. I would get very annoyed when people smiled back.. On that tour, Pakistan got to know who Sachin Tendulkar was. We realised this guy was something special," Akram said.

Tendulkar went on to play a record-setting 200 Tests for India. He scored 15,921 runs at an average of 53.78 and a world record tally of 51 hundreds. Tendulkar retired after playing his final Test in Mumbai against the West Indies on November 14, 2013.

https://www.indiatoday.in/sports/cr...-30-years-november-15-1989-1619224-2019-11-15
 
I was clueless on Test debut, thought had played my last game: Sachin Tendulkar

LONDON: Sachin Tendulkar says he was "clueless" on his Test debut and almost cried thinking it was all over for him.

When he walked out for the last time 24 years later, Tendulkar would do so as a batting great with a record 200 Test appearances to his name.

"I was clueless, I have to admit that. I played the first Test as if I was playing a school match," Sachin told Nasser Hussain during the 'Nasser meets Sachin' episode on Skysports.

In his first Test in 1989, Tendulkar was up against a Pakistan pace attack comprising Imran Khan, Wasim Akram and Waqar Younis.

Recalling the outing, he said, "Wasim and Waqar were bowling quick, and they were delivering short balls and all sorts of intimidating things they could do. I had never experienced anything like that, so the first outing wasn't a pleasant one.

"Occasionally, I got beaten by their pace and bounce, and when I got out on 15, I felt embarrassed when I walked back to the dressing room.

"I was like 'what have you done, why did you play like this' and then when I reached the dressing room, I went straight to the bathroom, and I was almost in tears."

Now the owner of innumerable batting records, Tendulkar, at that point in time, felt he was not good enough for international cricket.

"I felt I was completely out of place. I looked at myself and questioned myself and said: 'looks like this is gonna be your first and the last outing'. I felt that I'm not good enough to play at this level. I was upset and feeling low," Tendulkar said.

He said a conversation with Ravi Shastri, now the coach of the Indian team, helped.

"I still remember the conversation I had with Ravi Shastri. Ravi said, 'you played as if it was a school match. You are playing against the best bowlers; you need to respect their ability and their skill'.

"Then I told Ravi that I got beaten by their (Pakistan bowlers) pace. To which Ravi said: 'That happens to quite a few, you don't worry. You just look to go out and spend half an hour in the middle and then you will get adjusted to their pace, and everything will fall into place after that'."

Tendulkar was picked for the second Test and showed he had it in him with a gritty half-century.

"When I was picked to play in the second Test at Faisalabad, the only thing on my mind was, I'm not gonna look at the scoreboard. I will only look at the clock and not worry about scoring runs.

"I batted for half an hour, and I felt really comfortable and I scored 59 runs in that match and after that things started changing," Tendulkar, whose favourite all-rounders are Kapil Dev, Imran Khan, Richard Hadlee, Malcolm Marshall and Ian Botham, said.

https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com...ame-sachin-tendulkar/articleshow/75378166.cms
 
What an amazing debut duo.

The things these two achieved together is truly remarkable.

What if they played as team mates

What difference they would have made to each other's trophy cabinet and win records?
 
The world of cricket will always be thankful to both for gracing our cricket fields.
 
Historic day when two GOAT level talents in their respective fields made debut together.

Sachin is Sachin and many will.argue from their heart that peak Waqar was GOAT level good.

Much respect to both.

Makes for a great story.
 
Amazing that Tendulkar played under Kapil Dev and then retired playing with Kohli, Sharma and co. Incredible and unheard of longevity.

IMG_20201115_172746.jpg
 
A GOAT debuted that day.

Longevity, consistency and all-round performance, all hail the legend.

We talk about Anderson that he has 600 test wickets and is a legend but he averages only 26 with bowl and with an away average over 30.

Here we have, Sachin Tendulkar, who amassed 15900 test runs at average of 53 and away average also over 50. This is how you do it. Longevity and all-round performance as well.

:salute
 
Waqar Younis about Sachin Tendulkar in an interview I did with him earlier this year:

"We were all literally laughing at Sachin Tendulkar when we saw him on debut.

One year before my Test debut, I had played for Pakistan Under-19s against India Under-19s and many of the Indian players were talking about the ‘little kid’ Tendulkar. They were all saying watch out for him, he is a run-machine and will be a star. Then a few months later in 1989, Sachin was touring Pakistan and as luck would have it, we both made our Test debuts at Karachi. I recall Sachin walking into bat and I was thinking who is this baby-faced little kid who belongs in a junior school. We were all literally laughing at him and wondering what he was doing playing for his country. He played a few nice shots, but he appeared very nervous and out of his depth at that stage of his career, but by the end of the tour and by the final Test match, he was settled-in and looked a lot more comfortable, and was already showing his class and ability."
 
Waqar Younis about Sachin Tendulkar in an interview I did with him earlier this year:

"We were all literally laughing at Sachin Tendulkar when we saw him on debut.

One year before my Test debut, I had played for Pakistan Under-19s against India Under-19s and many of the Indian players were talking about the ‘little kid’ Tendulkar. They were all saying watch out for him, he is a run-machine and will be a star. Then a few months later in 1989, Sachin was touring Pakistan and as luck would have it, we both made our Test debuts at Karachi. I recall Sachin walking into bat and I was thinking who is this baby-faced little kid who belongs in a junior school. We were all literally laughing at him and wondering what he was doing playing for his country. He played a few nice shots, but he appeared very nervous and out of his depth at that stage of his career, but by the end of the tour and by the final Test match, he was settled-in and looked a lot more comfortable, and was already showing his class and ability."

In those days I used to listen radio PK on Short wave and although the reception was always poor, you could make out that he was counter attacking.. For me it remains one of IKs greatest failures as captain to beat a really poor Ind team.
 
Back
Top