Try the powerful Cricketain search:
Most Searched Topics:
World Cup 2011 KKR Sachin Live Score Shah Rukh Khan Twenty20 IPL CSKPublished: February 25, 2010
London: After watching him score the first ever double hundred in one-day cricket, former England skipper Nasser Hussain is convinced that Sachin Tendulkar is the greatest batsman of all time, even better than Sir Don Bradman.
“I have never liked comparisons between great players, but after Wednesday’s incredible game it must be said Sachin Tendulkar is the greatest batsman of all time,” Hussain wrote in his column for The Daily Mail.
Tendulkar, on Wednesday, became the first batsman in the 40-year long history of one day cricket to score a double ton. Sachin scored an unbeaten 200 and led India to a series-clinching 153-run win over the Proteas and Hussain feels that this innings should, once and for all, settle the debate on who is the greatest batsman ever.
“He is better than Brian Lara and Ricky Ponting, the other two great players of my era. Better than Sir Viv Richards, Sunil Gavaskar and Allan Border. And I would even say better than Sir Don Bradman himself,” wrote the Chennai-born English cricketer.
Hussain said Tendulkar has almost miraculously managed to retain his early enthusiasm even after two decades of international cricket which he found incredible.
“I played against Tendulkar on my first England tour, the Nehru Cup in India in 1989, and I could still see that excited boy in big pads in Gwalior,” said Hussain, who once resorted to negative tactics and made left-arm spinner Ashley Giles to bowl outside the leg-stump to curb the Indian.
“That extraordinary drive and enthusiasm are what make Tendulkar so special. He has been playing international cricket for 20 years under the intense scrutiny being an Indian superstar brings, so it is remarkable he still loves holding a bat as much as ever,” Hussain said.
Looking back at Tendulkar’s illustrious career, Hussain said that the only thing left now for Tendulkar to do is guide India to victory in the 2011 World Cup.
“What else is left for Tendulkar now? Well, it is sometimes said that he has not played enough match-winning innings on the really big occasion for India. What better, then, than to score a hundred in the World Cup final against Australia? or maybe even England? on home soil this time next year,” he said. “That would be the full stop that would enable Tendulkar to ride off into the sunset with everything achieved in his career.”
Doffing his hat to Tendulkar and referring to maverick soccer coach Jose Maurinho’s famous moniker, Hussain said, “My admiration for him is total. To steal the nickname of a certain football coach who led Inter Milan against Chelsea on Wednesday, Sachin Tendulkar truly is The Special One.”
Tagged with: England, India, London, Nasser Hussain, Sachin Tendulkar, Sir Don Bradman