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The making of champions Tendulkar and Lee

Updated on: 28 February,2010 07:24 AM IST  | 
Ian Chappell |

If the well-known song writing duo Willie Nelson and Waylon Jennings were cricket fans they would've added the line to their popular hit: "Mammas don't let your babies grow up to be cowboys ...or fast bowlers."

The making of champions Tendulkar and Lee

If the well-known song writing duo Willie Nelson and Waylon Jennings were cricket fans they would've added the line to their popular hit: "Mammas don't let your babies grow up to be cowboys ...or fast bowlers."

On the same day Brett Lee announced the termination of his Test appearances in an attempt to prolong his cricket career, a sprightly Sachin Tendulkar was adding to his glittering reputation by amassing a spectacular double century, the first in a one-day international.

Lee, a genuine fast bowler is aged 33. Tendulkar, a top-order batsman is closing in on 37. Life expectancy may have dramatically improved since the 1960's but the medical advances don't apply to fast bowlers. In his illustrious Test career Dennis Lillee bowled nearly 2000 more deliveries than Lee.u00a0

Tendulkar was in attendance when Lee commenced his 300-wicket Test career with a memorable bag of five at the Melbourne Cricket Ground. The difference being, at that stage Tendulkar had already been around for ten years and scored a career worth of centuries, as he compiled his 22nd in that MCG Test. Another decade on and the batsman is still operating like a long-life battery while the fast bowler is rapidly approaching his use-by-date.

The assumption could easily be made that; "Mammas should let their babies grow up to be batsmen."
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Throughout his career Lee has displayed ample determination to recover from debilitating injuries. He always put in the hard work in the gym and on the running track to ensure each comeback was successful but in the end a serious elbow injury was one operation too many. It's amazing that with so many setbacks he played his cricket with a ready smile and never a snarl.






Test cricket needs genuine pace men to fully live up to its reputation for being the only thorough examination of a player. However, a youngster would be unwise to head down that career path if he doesn't possess a big heart, a capacity for hard work and a tolerance for pain.

Work ethic

That's not to say batsmen don't also require a big heart and a strong work ethic. No one has spent more time on his batting than Tendulkar who still hits numerous practice shots in preparation for special performances like the one in Gwalior.

At about the age Lee is now, it appeared Tendulkar's spectacular career was winding down. A series of injuries had robbed him of much of the sparkle that made his batting stand out above all but Brian Lara's. However, by gaining a "second wind", Tendulkar has shown he has ample determination, a strong mind and a great desire to compete.

It's not just the number of runs he's scored in this prolific period, although four Test centuries in six innings is pretty impressive, rather it's the manner of his run gathering. In his scintillating 175 against Australia and the double century that demolished South Africa, it was his dominance that stood out. Both innings rattled along at much better than a run-a-ball and when he is regularly punching drives off the back-foot you know Tendulkar is master of all he surveys.

The urge to dominate which defined his "little maestro" period, was replaced by a more tenacious Tendulkar in his thirties but thankfully the urge to dictate to bowlers has re-surfaced of late.

Maybe with Virender Sehwag demolishing attacks he didn't feel the need to dominate. Whatever had been dragging on his batting reigns it was suddenly released for those two ODI innings and the "little maestro" made a couple of welcome reappearances.

For awhile it appeared certain that Ricky Ponting would surpass Tendulkar's Test aggregate and maybe even his tally of centuries. Now that the revitalized "little maestro" has shown a renewed thirst for runs and dominance, that's far from a guarantee.

However, if the cricketing mammas of this world ignore Lee's message and influence their young to eschew fast bowling, there's no guessing what massive run-making records a future batting maestro might accumulate.

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