Sachin
Tendulkar's impressive performances in the ongoing Test series
against England has made Michael Atherton eat his words as the
former cricketer has expressed "great admiration" for
the Indian, admitting he had matured to be "a very fine player
now". "Watching Tendulkar bat throughout this series
has been a curious business; his decline at once obvious and yet,
since that decline has been accompanied by two telling innings,
there comes with it a greater admiration," Atherton wrote
in a British newspaper ''Daily Telegraph''. "''Decline''
is a relative term, of course. It is simply that Tendulkar is
now a very fine player rather than a very great one," he
said after the Indian scored 217 runs and also picked some crucial
wickets in the three-match series. Atherton had joined the intense
debate started by former Australian captain Ian Chappell on whether
Tendulkar should call it a day in the aftermath of his poor showing
in the World Cup by writing a column in the paper under the headline
"Sachin Tendulkar, now just a comic hero". Atherton
had also doubted that if sponsorship deals were among the reasons
that was keeping Tendulkar going in cricket. "The truth is
that Tendulkar has been marketed as a brand for some time. There
are many interested parties who are keen to see Tendulkar wearing
India's colours for a while yet... "There are only two reasons
for carry on playing: if you are good enough, and if you still
love the game. Only Tendulkar knows whether that love is alive.
Everyone else is painfully aware that, despite his new super-hero
status, his powers are very much on the wane," Atherton had
said
|