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'A rare gem like Sachin doesn't come along very often'
By
Greg Chappell
Tuesday, March 4 2003 17:04 Hrs (IST)
He is one of the best four batsmen I have seen and he is the best player of his
generation. What is it that makes him so good?
He has an exceptional physical talent. He has outstanding balance. He is very
competitive. He is very strong. He has exceptional speed. He has great presence and
an excellent temperament. He has a huge desire to be the best and he has an
extraordinary mental ability.
Batting at the highest levels of the game is as much about mental skills as it is
about physical talents. The better players may have a greater range of strokes than
the rest but you can bet they also have a greater mental
capacity.
Sir Donald Bradman was the best batsman of all time because he was the most
determined and mentally strong batsman there has ever been. I am sure I have seen
batsmen who have had as much physical talent as Bradman but they have not had the
same ruthless drive to make big scores.
Bradman had the ability to treat batting in matches the same way as he batted in the
middle. He seldom felt the same pressures of batting that mere mortals feel. This
allowed him to concentrate for long periods.
What exactly is concentration? Concentration is the ability to focus on the
important things at the right moment while blocking out the rest. Some things are
more relevant than others at different times.
At the point of delivery the only thing that a batsman should see in his field of
vision is the ball leaving the bowler's hand. Just prior to the point of delivery
the batsman should see the full view of the bowler as he folds up into the delivery
position.
The ability to be able to track between the two at the appropriate times separates
the men from the boys. Testing that was done with Bradman concluded that his
eyesight and reflexes were within the 'normal' range.
What he did better than the rest was to pick up the cues from the bowlers' action
just prior to, and at the point of, delivery better than all the rest. I have no
doubt Bradman, a well organised man, had a process of concentration for each and
every delivery. His instincts were well trained from hours and hours of hitting golf
balls with a cricket stump as a young man.
His brain will have had a greater capacity for storing information than the most
complex computers that man can build. The most important part of a batsman's
development happens in the early stages of learning the game.
The instinctive skills that are learnt at this stage are relied upon when under
pressure in a match situation. These instinctive skills are learnt rather than
taught. A good coach will create the environment in which the young
player will train these instincts.
The early environment in which Sachin learnt his skills must have been excellent.
His instincts are outstanding. I have been lucky enough to see all of the best
batsmen of the past 50 years.
Some of those whom I rate in the very top bracket of the elite group of players in
that time would be Peter May, Ken Barrington, Neil Harvey, Garfield Sobers, Rohan
Kanhai, Mansur Ali Khan Pataudi, Graeme Pollock, Sunil Gavaskar, Clive Lloyd, Barry
Richards, Doug Walters, Viv Richards, Javed Miandad, Gordon Greenidge Ian Chappell,
Allan Border, the Waughs, Adam Gilchrist, Matthew Hayden, Brian Lara and Tendulkar.
Each one of these players had slightly different methods and styles but each had
great instincts. If I had to pick the best of all of these I would choose
Sobers, closely followed by Pollock, Viv Richards and Tendulkar in no particular
order. They all possessed 'genius' quality and could win matches on their own. Each
hit the ball with incredible power.
Sobers' record has stood the test of time for he made runs under all conditions
against all types of bowling. Tendulkar's record is also exceptional and he has
played well against quality pace and spin. His clashes with Shane Warne in recent
times, especially the past two Australian tours of India, have provided some
excellent theatre.
I have also seen him take on Saqlain Mushtaq and Muttiah Muralitharan in Sharjah and
Sri Lanka respectively and he has taken them on and come out on top nearly every
time. Tendulkar's record in the games India must win is
excellent and stamps him as a true champion.
His footwork and brute force are awesome to see and his range of stroke play makes
him the most awkward of customers against whom to bowl. I love to watch him bat
because he has two or three options to the same delivery and he is just as likely to
hit the best balls for four, or six.
If there were a weakness in his armoury some would say it is against quality fast
bowling on the bouncy wickets of Australia. If that is true it doesn't make him
Robinson Crusoe! All good players have been troubled by quality fast bowling on
bouncy wickets at one time or another.
As the pre-eminent batsman of his time, Tendulkar is always targeted by the
opposition and has been tested on innumerable occasions. He has come out on top more
often than not and his successes have usually carried India's fortunes with them.
Few of Tendulkar's predecessors have played as much One-day cricket as he has and
few, Bradman apart, have had to endure the pressure of mass adulation at home as he
has.
The fact that he has endured the adulation, and the pressure of expectation of one
billion fans, and has been able to maintain his equilibrium and his passion for the
game is a great credit to him and his parents who obviously set an excellent
foundation for him.
He cannot last forever so I make every effort to see him bat whenever I can for he
is a rare gem, the like of which does not come along very often. India's fortunes in
the remainder of this World Cup campaign will no doubt parallel the vicissitudes of
the 'little master's' fortunes.
PTI
Extras:
Sachin in his current form can win WC for India: Imran
Sachin's intimidation of Pak bowlers was heady stuff!
British media 'head over heels' in love with Tendulkar
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