Monday, September 30, 2013

Sachin: God fallen off grace?

(30 Sep 2013)

I, like many my age, grew up in an era when a child prodigy stormed into the sporting arena with fire in the eyes and magic in the willow. This curly-haired wonder boy was one day going to not only make history as perhaps the greatest man to have played the game of cricket in our times, but also be elevated to the level of God. Sachin Tendulkar he is! No other cricketer – not even a Bradman or a Richards or a Warne – has ever been idolized with so intense frenzy by fans.



Is there any denying however that despite all of this, Sachin Tendulkar the phenomenon is a mere mortal, and that he will one day have to go? He’s already retired from the ODI format of the game. Some would argue he could have retired on a real high after India’s 2011 World Cup win at home. In the recent many months, Sachin has fallen prey to the mammoth shadow of his illustrious past, when he’s been repeatedly seen trying hard for shots that he would once play with silken ease. He’s been conquered by extremely bad deliveries and by average bowlers, times without count. It is a painful sight to behold for a cricket lover when their demi god struggles to make petty thirties and fifties. This simply isn’t something we’re used to seeing.

Rumors and theories have been abuzz on when Sachin should hang up his Test boots. Of course every individual athlete is the best judge to decide when they should play their last match. Sachin has maintained he still had the hunger for more cricket and that he was loving his game. None of us will ever be able to even imagine how proud, how humbling, how great it feels to be a Sachin and walk in to the middle with thousands of fans cheering from all over the ground. We’ll also never know how extremely difficult it is to time well the moment of graceful exit, leaving your fans to forever mourn that you could have played more and that you left at your prime. This truly is a Godly decision. There are too few sporting legends who could muster the courage to call it quits when they knew they could still hang on for some more time, out in the middle, amidst all the glare, all the fanfare, all the madness.

The nature of the beast is such that it ruthlessly bites everyone especially towards the twilight of their career. The fans who once were ready to die for you won’t mind booing you when you falter. Sachin fans will find it painful to remember their hero as someone who kept on trying and failing, rather than someone who was once the best in the business.



Sachin has already missed the opportunity to bow out at the peak. For many, he’s already fallen off the Godly grace. It’s disturbing for any lover of the game to imagine that this champion will keep trying and will one day be asked by a BCCI office bearer – a virtual nobody – to quit.


Nobody is bigger than the game they play. For cricket, the country comes first and I’m certain Sachin realizes that he’s been for some time fighting against too many natural odds. By trying harder and longer he isn’t going to achieve anything he hasn’t already. Our memories of Sachin’s heydays are too magical to ever be erased even by his own failures late in the day. The game of cricket will always be grateful to this man who not only played it, but glorified it in myriads of ways. Sachin’s biggest fan forever will be cricket itself! 

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