India’s Tendulkar in final Test appearance

Only man to score 100 international centuries ending cricket career spanning 25 years with match in Mumbai.

Sachin Tendulkar, the Indian cricket legend, has taken to the pitch for his 200th and final Test, bidding farewell to his adoring public and basking in tributes from fellow players, politicians and fans.

The 40-year-old is ending an international career spanning nearly a quarter of a century during which he became the all-time leading Test and one-day batsman and the only man to score 100 international centuries.

The end of the Little Master, who has almost God-like status in his cricket-mad country, has been met with nationwide nostalgia for his sporting feats since his international debut in 1989.

Tendulkar, who led the team out onto the field in his home city of Mumbai on Thursday, said the last 20 years had been “marked by some of the most challenging, exhilarating, poignant and memorable moments of my life”.

“The game has seen so much change over the last two decades – from advances in technology, new formats, yet the basic spirit and passion surrounding the game remains the same,” he wrote in a front-page Hindustan Times article.

“Sachin mania” in the run-up to the game against the West Indies has been building since he announced his intention to retire last month, with highlights of his innings and interviews looping on news channels.

Empty stadium seats

Many followers have expressed disappointment that only 5,000 out of 32,000 seats were for the general public, with the rest reserved for VIPs such as sponsors and cricket club members.

About half were empty after the match began.

Such was the demand for the publicly available tickets that the main website selling them crashed within minutes of sales opening on Monday.

Before the match started, the Mumbai Cricket Association presented Tendulkar with a enlarged photograph of a postage stamp released by the government in his honour.

Footage broadcast on Indian television showed the toss taking place with a specially minted coin bearing his image on one side.

“We will be very fortunate if we get another Sachin,” Mahendra Singh Dhoni, Indian captain, said at the toss.

“So it is important that we learn from the great man.”

Twitter message

Despite Tendulkar’s glowing reputation, his cricketing powers have waned in recent years and some suggested that he should have retired earlier. The latest of his 51 Test centuries was back in January 2011 against South Africa.

Since 16-year-old Tendulkar made his debut in Karachi in 1989, he has racked up an astonishing 15,847 runs in 199 Tests, helping India win the 2011 World Cup and reach the top of the world rankings.

On the eve of his final match, he thanked his fans on Twitter “from the bottom of my heart for 24 years of support”.

Along with Tendulkar murals, banners and billboards that have sprung up in the countdown to the match, Mumbai’s tattoo parlours have reportedly seen a surge in requests for designs of the sporting icon.

On a beach in the eastern state of Odisha, an artist created a huge sand sculpture of 200 cricket bats and Tendulkar’s face.

The star’s wheelchair-bound mother Rajni is due to watch her son bat for the first time, after a special ramp was built for her at the south Mumbai stadium, despite her previous fears that her presence at matches could bring him bad luck.

Source: Al Jazeera, News Agencies