Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Sachin rewrites history, hits first double ton in ODI

Sachin Tendulkar 200 Runs
RECORD-BREAKING KNOCK: Sachin Tendulkar celebrates after becoming the first cricketer to hit a double century in ODIs, taking India to 401/3 in the second match against South Africa in Gwalior on Wednesday.

Milestone man Sachin Tendulkar rewrote the record books today, hammering the first double century in the history of one-day cricket to add another feather to his well-adorned cap.

The capacity crowd at the Captain Roop Singh Stadium witnessed history on Wednesday as Tendulkar, statistically the greatest batsman the game has ever seen, pushed a Charl Langeveldt delivery through the off-side and ran a single to achieve a feat which no other cricketer has achieved.

One Day International cricket, since its 1971 inception, had to wait nearly four decades to see a batsman score 200.

The previous best mark was shared by Zimbabwean Charles Coventry (194 not out) and Pakistan’s Saeed Anwar (194).

As the crowd erupted with unbridled joy, Tendulkar, tired but composed, took off his helmet, looked skyward, closed his eyes to offer a silent prayer.

His captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni came down from the striker’s end to shake hands and hug him.

And as Tendulkar set on his way back to the pavilion after the completion of the Indian innings, a tumultuous celebration greeted him.

The crowd gave him a standing ovation as the entire stadium erupted in euphoria while his teammates were simply ecstatic as they clapped and hugged each other, basking in the glory of their senior teammates.

Tendulkar's double century steered India to a massive 401 for three against South Africa in the second cricket ODI here.

Tendulkar played an incredible and heart-stopping knock, which came off just 147 balls, treating the capacity crowd at the Captain Roop Singh stadium to a stunning exhibition of strokeplay.

It was not only Tendulkar’s 46th ODI century but it also marked the highest score in one-dayers, eclipsing the previous record of 194, which was held by Pakistan’s Saeed Anwar and Zimbabwe’s Charles Conventry.

25 fours, 3 sixes in unbeaten knock

The little master was on fire and the South African bowlers bore the brunt as they were literally made to bleed runs at the short ground. His sublime unbeaten 200 came off just 147 balls and was bejewelled with 25 fours and three sixes.

Along with the classic Mumbai batsman, Charl Langvedt went into the history books as Tendulkar achieved the amazing milestone off his bowling.

Tendulkar steered Langveldt to the off side to get to the magical figure and the packed stadium went into a frenzy.

Dinesh Karthik (79), captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni (68 not out) and Yusuf Pathan (36) were the other notable performers in India’s mammoth total, leaving the Proteas to score at a stiff asking rate of just over eight runs per over.

Tendulkar’s previous best was an unbeaten 186 against New Zealand made at Hyderabad in 1999.

Tendulkar, Karthik in record stand

During his unforgettable knock, Tendulkar rattled up a record 194-run second-wicket partnership with Dinesh Karthik, who recorded his career best 79 off 85 balls with the help of four fours and three six.

They bettered the earlier Indian record against the Proteas by 13 runs. Tendulkar and Rahul Dravid had made 181 at Nagpur in 2000.

It was Tendulkar all over as he also shared quick and big partnerships with Pathan and skipper Dhoni to pile the agony on the South Africans.

With Pathan he added 81 runs for the third wicket, which ended when the Baroda all-rounder fell to Roelf van der Merwe.

Pathan played his own aggressive brand of game and was ruthless against Parnell, hitting the left-armer for two sixes and a four in the 38th over.

Paceman Dale Steyn cut a sorry figure, bleeding runs in every spell of his and was hit for four boundaries in the 37th over by Pathan and Tendulkar.

Such was the impact of the power-hitting of the Indian batsmen that hardly any visiting bowlers could keep a good line and length.

Unbeaten 101-run stand with Dhoni

Then for the fourth wicket, Tendulkar and Dhoni raised an unbeaten 101-run stand, which took India to its highest score against South Africa.

Earlier, Sehwag almost had a disastrous start as he survived a tough chance in the second ball of the match when South African pace spearhead Steyn failed to hold on to a low straight drive.

Sehwag though could not last long as one cut off Parnell flew down to third man and Steyn accepted the chance gleefully.In came Dinesh Karthik and after a few watchful deliveries the Tamil Nadu batsman dispatched Parnell for a couple of fours to start his innings in brilliant fashion.

Karthik played a perfect partner to Tendulkar by keeping the scorer busy with good running and finding boundaries, letting the senior pro play his natural game.

They did not spare any bad ball and in just 10 overs India had put on 74 runs on the board, puncturing all Proteas hopes of taking advantage of an early wicket.

South Africa’s opening bowlers were made to look pedestrian as they leaked 78 runs in their first spells.

Tendulkar hit just four fours to reach 100 from 50 but opened up after reaching the three-figure mark as he lofted Duminy over long on for his first six after hitting Kallis for a four in the previous over.

Sachin Tendulkar scores 200 Runs

Sachin Tendulkar 200
Sachin Tendulkar claimed the most elusive ODI record of them all when he scored the first ever double century in the game's history.

South Africa, a team he hasn't had the best of records against, bore the brunt of his aggression as India totalled a mammoth 401-3 having elected to bat in the Gwalior ODI.

Tendulkar --- 200 not out, 147 balls, 25 fours and three sixes --- beat Saeed Anwar and Charles Coventry's record of 194, after he had bettered the Indian record of 186 --- set by him in 1999 against New Zealand.

Dinesh Karthik (79 from 85b) and MS Dhoni (68 not out from 35) aided Tendulkar strongly. Karthik added 194 for the second wicket with Tendulkar, before he and Dhoni added 101 from just 54 balls, taking India past 400 off the final ball.

Tendulkar completed his fifty off 37 balls, and slowed down a little to complete his hundred off 90.

Just after Karthik got out and India claimed the batting Power Play, Tendulkar motored along with Yusuf Pathan (36, 23b) and reached his 150 in just 28 more balls.

In the process, he also claimed the ODI record for most fours in an innings. He broke Virender Sehwag's Indian record of 21, and then ended the innings with 25 fours --- one more than the previous record by Sanath Jayasuriya against the Netherlands.

Tendulkar claimed the scoring world record in the 46th over with a clip off his toe for a double. But as Dhoni hogged the strike and completed a 29-ball fifty, Tendulkar had to wait till the 50th over --- bowled by Parnell again --- to complete the double hundred.

The elusive record finally fell off the third ball of the over which Tendulkar squeezed through point. A misfiled allowed him to take a single. He finished the innings on 200 not out.

No bowler was spared today in the course of Tendulkar's flawless innings. The closest South Africa came to getting his wicket was when he'd already crossed 150 and a close run-out call was referred upstairs.

The feared Dale Steyn conceded 85 in his ten overs. Parnell went for 95 in his full quota. Charl Langeveldt, an ODI specialist, was wicketless for 70 having suffered a nasty cut to his head early on a ball bounced unexpectedly at mid-on and hit him on the head.

Sachin Tendulkar 200 not out

Sachin Tendulkar 200

Sachin Tendulkar created history by firing the first double century in one-day internationals as India put South Africa to the sword in Gwalior.

The 36-year-old was in indomitable form as he bludgeoned 25 fours and three sixes in a stunning 200 off 147 balls.

It passed the previous best of 194, set by Pakistan's Saeed Anwar in 1997 and Zimbabwe's Charles Coventry last year.

And it led India, aided by a fabulous cameo of 68 off 35 balls from Mahendra Dhoni, to a superb 401-3 from 50 overs.

Tendulkar, whose previous best one-day knock was the 186 not out he scored against New Zealand in 1999, is already the leading run-scorer in Test and ODI cricket.

HIGHEST INDIVIDUAL ODI SCORES
200* Sachin Tendulkar, India v South Africa 2010
194* Charles Coventry, Zimbabwe v Bangladesh 2009
194 Saeed Anwar, Pakistan v India 1997
189* Viv Richards, W Indies v England 1984
189 Sanath Jayasuriya, Sri Lanka v India 2000

But to have reached such a landmark, with a single in the final over, only serves to underline his class and add to the legacy that already surrounds arguably the finest batsman to have played the game.

His innings was typified by wristy strokes, trademark boundary shots and, above all, stamina as he batted through the entire innings.

He passed the previous best score in ODIs off 140 deliveries before taking his time over the final six runs, completing his double century with a single off Charl Langeveldt four balls from the end of the innings.

Despite clearly suffering with cramp towards the end, Tendulkar was not to be denied and the packed Gwalior crowd were in raptures as he brought up the record.

Around him, Dinesh Karthik and Dhoni provided able support.

606: DEBATE
So glad he is the first one to get there in the mens game

80mph

Karthik, who came to the crease in just the fourth over after sending a high catch down to Dale Steyn at third man off Wayne Parnell, struck four fours and three sixes on his way to an 85-ball knock of 79.

He departed when he mistimed a pull shot to Herschelle Gibbs at mid-wicket but Yusuf Pathan upped the pace with 36 off 23 balls, including two huge sixes.

However, not even he could match Dhoni's remarkable strokeplay, the India captain providing a staggering display of power hitting with four sixes and seven fours that allowed Tendulkar to calmly build his record-breaking innings at the other end.

Sachin Tendulkar 200