Tendulkar bears immense burden at World Cup

LONDON, (Reuters) – Sachin Tendulkar, possessor of  every one-day batting record worth holding, carries an  unparalleled weight of expectation over the course of the next  two months.

Even the incomparable Australian Don Bradman, whose feats at  the crease during the Great Depression sustained an emerging  nation’s morale, did not endure the pressure Tendulkar will  confront at the 10th World Cup opening in Dhaka on Feb. 19.

According to the historian Ramachandra Guha, Tendulkar is  the best-known Indian alive with a status equivalent to a Hindu  god or a Bollywood film star. When he faced the former Pakistan  opening bowler Wasim Akram the television audience in India  exceeded the entire population of Europe.

“Batsmen walk out into the middle alone,” wrote the Indian  poet and critic C.P. Surendran. “Not Tendulkar. Every time  Tendulkar walks to the crease, a whole nation, tatters and all,  marches with him to the battle arena.

Sachin Tendulkar

“A pauper people pleading for relief, remission from the  lifelong anxiety of being Indian, by joining in spirit their  visored saviour.”
Tendulkar scored his 51st test century this year after a  duel with South African fast bowler Dale Steyn recalling  Bradman’s jousts with England’s Harold Larwood in the 1932-33  Bodyline series.

Three more one-day hundreds in the World Cup climaxing in  his native Mumbai on April 2 would make him the only batsman to  total 100 centuries over both forms of the game, a landmark  which like Bradman’s test average of 99.94 would probably last  forever.

“I still want to achieve something and everyone knows that,”  Tendulkar, 37, said last month at a ceremony to celebrate  India’s number one spot in the world test rankings.

SPIN RULES
Fourteen teams have been divided into two groups for the  tournament, co-hosted by India, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh, with  the top four from each division advancing to the quarter-finals.  The first round follows a week of warmup matches, further  extending an already overlong competition, and on paper looks  soporifically predictable.

In Group A, defending champions Australia, New Zealand,  Pakistan and Sri Lanka would have to seriously under-perform to  miss qualifying ahead of Zimbabwe, Canada and Kenya.

Group B holds marginally more interest. Bangladesh barely  hold their own in test cricket but they can be a force in the  one-day game, especially on their own pitches as a 4-0 drubbing  of New Zealand late last year testified. With a host of slow, naggingly accurate bowlers on sluggish  pitches, Bangladesh could well qualify at the expense of West  Indies in a group including India, England, South Africa,  Ireland and the Netherlands.

The explosion in the one-day game in India, which made the  country the richest and most powerful nation in world cricket,  followed their upset win over West Indies in the 1983 final  under the inspired captaincy of all-rounder Kapil Dev.

At subsequent World Cups they have not played to their  potential, reaching only one other final when they were  demolished by an outstanding Australian side in 2003.

To exploit home advantage, India have packed their side with  full- and part-time spinners in the knowledge that when the  knockout stages eventually get away in late March temperatures  will be soaring and the pitches will deteriorate faster.

MURALITHARAN DEPARTS

The other leading contenders have reached the same  conclusion with even South Africa, who have historically viewed  spin bowling with deep suspicion, naming three slow bowlers.South Africa possess a modern-day master in all-rounder  Jacques Kallis, whose averages stand comparison with those of  Garfield Sobers. They will again field a confident, aggressive  side but have consistently failed to convert potential into  performance at the World Cup.

Australia, emphatic champions in the last three tournaments,  were trounced by England in the Ashes but won the subsequent  one-day series with Shane Watson batting with muscular authority  at the top of the order and a revitalised Brett Lee bowling at  express pace.