Tendulkar falls for 94

NEW DELHI, (Reuters) – Sachin Tendulkar stood  on the brink of batting immortality only to retreat, plunging a  milestone-obsessed country into depression and triggering a  debate on his vulnerability against the pressure of expectation.
Six runs shy of a record 100th international century,  Tendulkar’s usually impeccable shot selection deserted him on a  placid pitch at his home Wankhede Stadium today.
The 32,000-seat venue sported a forlorn and empty expression  on the first two days of the third West Indies test as the  tourists piled up 590 runs, but the ground became more densely  populated on Thursday before it was packed to the brim on Friday  morning in anticipation of the milestone.
Tendulkar whetted the Mumbai faithful’s appetite too,  upper-cutting Fidel Edwards for a six to waltz into the 90s but  the landmark century was to elude him yet again.
Paceman Ravi Rampaul banged in a short and wide delivery,  hardly the deadliest ball Tendulkar has faced in his  two-decade-plus career. Trying to punch it, Tendulkar opened the  face of the blade and edged it into the welcoming hands of  skipper Darren Sammy at second slip.
A short groan echoed around the stadium before being  replaced by an eerie silence as Tendulkar hung his head, sighed  and trudged back to the pavilion.
Many believe it was pressure, and not Rampaul, which  accounted for the 38-year-old ‘Little Master’.
After all, this was the second time he fell in the 90s since  scoring his 99th international century in a 50-over World Cup  match against South Africa in March.
Since then, Tendulkar has hit six half-centuries — two in  one-dayers and four in tests — but has been unable to add to  his 51 test and 48 one-day centuries.
Twice previously he came close but fell leg before on both  occasions.
Tendulkar, who has scored more than 33,000 international  runs since his 1989 debut in Pakistan, was nine short of the  100-mark in the Oval test in August when he tried to play across  the line and was dismissed by Tim Bresnan.
In the second innings of the Delhi test against West Indies  earlier this month, Tendulkar, batting fluently on 76, attempted  a pull shot and was dismissed by a skidding Devendra Bishoo  delivery that caught him plumb in front of wicket.
Six fifties in 16 innings since his 99th international  century notwithstanding, there is a growing feeling that  Tendulkar is finally showing signs of a pressure many thought he  was immune to for a majority of his career.

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Former team mate Sanjay Manjrekar wants Tendulkar, who has  grown selective with his one-day international participation, to  play and get the century in one of the five ODIs against West  Indies before India travels to Australia.
“India wants Tendulkar relaxed and confident (in Australia).  He should play the one dayers, get that monkey off his back and  go to Australia with a free mind,” Manjrekar told Neo Cricket  channel.
“(Rahul) Dravid and Tendulkar will be key for India in those  conditions against Australia.”
India captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni does not buy into the  theory that the milestone has bogged down a batsman used to  shouldering the expectation of a cricket-crazy country of 1.2  billion.
“If you are talking about the gentleman, the expectation has  always been the size of Everest,” Dhoni recently said in Delhi.
“Whatever he has done so far… right from the first two  years of his career, he has been a star.
“If he comes onto the field and does not score 50, people  think he has not scored. It’s something he deals with each and  every day.
“Any individual who comes close to any milestone… somehow  it takes more time than usual. I think it’s just round the  corner. We just need to wait.”
Tendulkar himself has dismissed the hype, terming his 100th  international century as “just a number”.
The fans, however, feel otherwise.
Many of them had no hesitation in praying, in vain, for  India to follow-on against West Indies so that Tendulkar had  another shot at the milestone on a batting paradise of a pitch.