Saturday, December 18, 2010
Tharolsavam, A refreshing change
Thursday, February 25, 2010

It was in 2000, while I was attending a class on Values of Work and Personal Ethics, along with many other members of faculty from various colleges across Kerala, the Professor who conducted the class asked us about our Role models in life.
I said, “Sachin Tendulkar”, without hesitating for a moment. That was spontaneous as I, never, had thought of a role model in life until that moment.
With a sarcastic smile on his face, the Professor started saying, “ No, no…role models means somebody like Mahatma Gandhi…”.
“Who said it should be like that?” I couldn’t respect the Professor anymore. “It’s my choice in whom I should see a role model. Your view is your own, not mine”.
That incident kept me on thinking for a while, why I found Sachin to be my role model; should a role model be always elder to you? Can a player of just a game be a role model for real life?
It took me to those days in 1989, while cricket was the first priority in life (even before food, let alone studies!). The news of the selection of a 16 yrs old guy to the Indian team for the tour to
He was not very successful in the first two tests. I relieved. Then came an ODI which, because of some technical reason (rain affected etc), was called an exhibition match.
“See, this useless can’t even lift his bat!! what the hell he is gonna do there”. I screamed out of frustration.
“… how awkward his style is…, holding the bat at the bottom end or is he using a long-handled bat?!!”. I hadn’t ever seen anybody holding the bat like that in Cricket until that moment.
I cursed everyone for sending such a useless guy in such a situation where even Srikkant was drowning. Mushi had 3 more balls left in that over. The first ball “the useless” faced was lofted to long off for 4!!. Something sparked in me, I sensed.
“Hmmm… he got that one right”.
The next, same shot but for SIX!!, more sparks in me;
now, the last ball , the same shot, dancing down the track lofted the ball to long on for another SIX!!! Wow… I could realize the charge of envy inside me got short circuited with a thick conductor to the ground (courtesy: RVR sir). A feeling of admiration and thrill started growing fast . It reached its peak when he blasted on all time great Abdul Quadir for “ 6,6,6,4,2,3” in an over. After that onslaught, it was not spark but fire inside me; the aura of fire from an Idol, I felt. Yes, Sachin Remesh Tendulkar stormed into the hearts and brains of millions like me in
(see that video here; but what Quadir says is wrong here regarding the sixes hit on him)
Ever since that, I started keeping records of every match (including practice matches) he played in my diary. It continued until 2003 when I realized Cricinfo has got a more reliable database of all the innings he had played so far.
I thanked Azharuddin (courtesy: telepathy ) for sending Sachin as an opener in an ODI against Newzeland in which he scored 82 off 49 balls. That innings was, in fact, the beginning of his journey towards the top of cricket-world. He was averaging around 35 while he was in the middle order for the first 57 ODI matches he played, with no 100s. The new opener role gave him the chance to smell the blood of a 100 for the first time in ODI when he scored 110 against
(it continues in Part-II)
