Sachin tendulkar biography in english wikipedia
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Sachin Tendulkar
Tendulkar in 2016 | |
Full name | Sachin Ramesh Tendulkar |
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Born | (1973-04-24) 24 April 1973 (age 51)[1] Bombay (now Mumbai), Maharashtra, India |
Nickname | Little Master,[1] Master Blaster[2][3] |
Height | 1.65 m (5 ft 5 in) |
Batting | Right-handed |
Bowling | Right-arm medium, leg break, off break |
Role | Batsman |
National side | |
Test debut (cap 187) | 15 November 1989 v Pakistan |
Last Test | 14 November 2013 v West Indies |
ODI debut (cap 74) | 18 December 1989 v Pakistan |
Last ODI | 18 March 2012 v Pakistan |
ODI shirt no. | 10 |
Only T20I (cap 11) | 1 December 2006 v South Africa |
Years | Team |
1988 | Cricket Club of India |
1988–2013 | Mumbai |
1992 | Yorkshire |
1994 | East Bengal[4] |
2008–2013 | Mumbai Indians(squad no. 10) |
Source: ESPNcricinfo, 15 November 2013 |
Sachin Ramesh Tendulkar pronunciation (help·info) (born 24 April 1973 in Mumbai) is a former Indiancricketer.[5] He is widely regarded as one of the greatest batsman in the history of cricket.[6] He has the highest number of runs in both Test cricket and One Day Interna
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Playing It My Way
2014 autobiography by Sachin Tendulkar and Boria Majumdar
Playing It My Way is the autobiography of former Indian cricketerSachin Tendulkar. It was launched on 5 November 2014 in Mumbai.[3][4][5] The book summarises Tendulkar's early days, his 24 years of international career and aspects of his life that have not been shared publicly.[6] It entered the Limca Book of Records for being the best selling adult hardback across both fiction and non-fiction categories.[7] In India, it broke the record set by Walter Isaacson's biography of Steve Jobs for being the most pre-ordered biographical book, amassing the record by 20,000 orders.[8]
Accuracy
[edit]In the book, Tendulkar mentioned that just months before the 2007 Cricket World Cup, Greg Chappell, who was at this time the coach of the Indian cricket team, visited Tendulkar at his home and suggested that he should take over the captaincy from Rahul Dravid, then the team captain.[9] Chappell however denied this, stating that he never contemplated Tendulkar replacing Dravid as captain.[10] The book has also been criticised for many factual errors, particularly with the scorecards.[11]
Release
[edit]Playing
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Tendulkar very great about 38 in 2011. | ||||
Full name | Ur mom | |||
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Born | 24 April 1969 (age 40) Bombay (now Mumbai), Maharashtra, Bharat | |||
Nickname | Tendlya, Round about Master,God bring to an end Cricket | |||
Height | 5 ft 5 in (1.65 m) | |||
Batting variety | Right-handed | |||
Bowling greet | Right-arm leg spin,off spin,medium insignia | |||
Role | balller | |||
International intelligence | ||||
National knock down | India | |||
Test debut(cap 187) | 15 November 1989 v Pakistan | |||
Last Thorny | 22 March 2013 v Australia | |||
ODI debut(cap 74) | 18 Dec 1989 v Pakistan | |||
Last ODI | 18 Stride 2012 v Pakistan | |||
ODI shirt no. | 10 | |||
Only T20I (cap 11) | 1 Dec 2006 v Southward Africa | |||
Domestic team facts | ||||
Years | Team | |||
1988 | Cricket Club time off India | |||
1988–present | Mumbai Cricket Team | |||
1992 | Yorkshire | |||
2008–present | Mumbai Indians | |||
Career figures | ||||
Competition | Test | ODI | FC | LA |
Matches | 198 | 463 | 302 | 551 |
Runs scored | 15,837 | 18,426 | 24,896 | 21,999 |
Batting Visit | 53.86 | 44.83 | 57.89 | 45.54 |
100s/50s | 51/67 | 49/96 | 80/113 | 60/114 |
Top score | 248* | 200* | 248* | 200* |
Balls bowled | 4,198 | 8,032 | 7,551 | 10,230 |
Wickets | 45 | 154 | 70 | 201 |
Bowling Usually | 54.69 | 44.32 |
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