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Tendulkar's diminishing returns

By Rajneesh Gupta
September 16, 2008 10:06 IST
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There is no doubting that Sachin Tendulkar is the best cricketer India has produced, and, rightly, he is revered as a cricketing god by his fans.

The Mumbai batsman, who made his international debut as a 16-year-old, has broken nearly every batting record in both ODIs and Tests and is well on course to add the remaining few to his name before he hangs up his boots.

There was a time when an Indian side without Tendulkar could not even be imagined. But all good things have to come to an end, and the emergence of a young brigade, coupled with a spate of injuries, have put Tendulkar's performances under scrutiny.

The following table lists Tendulkar's performance in Test cricket in each calendar year. For five consecutive years (between 1997 and 2001) he averaged more than 60. But it hasn't been as rewarding since then, and in his last four years (since 2005) runs have come at an average of about 42 -- which is still a very good average, but not upto the standards he set over the years.

Tendulkar in each calendar year:

Year Mts Inns NO Runs HS Avg 100 50 0
1989 4 6 0 215 59 35.83 0 2 0
1990 7 10 1 373 119* 41.44 1 2 1
1991 2 4 0 78 40 19.50 0 0 0
1992 7 11 1 419 148* 41.90 3 0 2
1993 8 9 2 640 165 91.42 2 5 0
1994 7 11 1 700 179 70.00 2 3 0
1995 3 4 2 58 52* 29.00 0 1 0
1996 8 15 0 623 177 41.53 2 2 1
1997 12 17 1 1000 169 62.50 4 3 0
1998 5 9 1 647 177 80.87 3 1 0
1999 10 19 3 1088 217 68.00 5 4 3
2000 6 10 1 575 201* 63.88 2 1 0
2001 10 18 2 1003 155 62.68 3 6 0
2002 16 26 1 1392 193 55.68 4 5 3
2003 5 9 0 153 55 17.00 0 1 2
2004 10 15 5 915 248* 91.50 3 2 0
2005 6 10 0 444 109 44.40 1 3 0
2006 8 12 1 267 63 24.27 0 1 1
2007 9 16 2 776 122* 55.42 2 6 0
2008 7 13 1 511 154 42.58 2 1 1

The following table gives Tendulkar's performances in each progressive span of 25 matches. He was at his prime in the third and fourth spans (that is between Test no. 51 to 100). However, the latest span is the worst of his career.

Tendulkar's progress in each span of 25 matches:

Match Inns NO Runs Avg HS 100s 50s 0s SR
1 - 25 37 3 1522 44.76 165 5 8 3 48.20
26 - 50 40 5 1916 54.74 179 6 8 1 53.84
51 - 75 42 4 2557 67.29 217 11 8 3 58.93
76 - 100 41 3 2410 63.42 201* 8 10 3 56.27
101 - 125 41 6 1876 53.60 248* 5 7 2 50.79
126 - 150 43 4 1596 40.92 154* 4 8 2 55.22

During his distinguished career, Tendulkar has suffered many injuries, but it is the famous 'tennis elbow' injury which seems to have cost him the most.

It was in 2004 that Tendulkar was troubled by a tennis elbow for the first time and since then he is not the same batsman we all have known him. It not only diminished his batting powers, but also signalled the start of an injury-ridden last few years for the batting maestro.

We take a look as how his performance has been affected ever since he developed this injury.

Overall Before Tennis-elbow After Tennis-elbow
Tests 150 114 36
Inns 244 184 60
NO 25 19 6
Runs 11877 9470 2407
Hs 248* 241* 248*
Avg 54.23 57.39 44.57
100 39 33 6
50 49 37 12
Inns/100 6.26 5.58 10.00

As the above table clearly shows, not only has Tendulkar's average dipped by 13 points after the injury, he is taking 10 innings to score a hundred on an average as against his earlier rate of 5.58!

The following table lists Tendulkar's performance against each country pre-tennis elbow and post-tennis elbow periods.

Tendulkar's average against Bangladesh and Pakistan has improved (more than 161 points against Bangladesh), but declined against major nations like Australia, England, South Africa and Sri Lanka.

Before tennis elbow After tennis elbow Change in Avg.
Opponent Mts Runs Avg Mts Runs Avg
Australia 19 1789 57.71 6 563 51.18 -6.53
Bangladesh 1 18 18.00 4 538 179.33 +161.33
England 16 1683 76.50 6 311 31.10 -45.40
New Zealand 16 1062 48.27 - -
Pakistan 10 600 40.00 8 457 45.70 +5.70
South Africa 14 948 37.92 6 254 28.22 -9.70
Sri Lanka 13 1124 80.29 6 284 25.82 -54.47
West Indies 16 1328 57.74 - -
Zimbabwe 9 918 76.50 - -

The reason why we are stressing on the tennis elbow injury is because that injury, in someways, has represented a turnaround in Tendulkar's career. Since recuperating from that injury, the 35-year-old has changed his batting style completely and now seems content to defend and give bowlers the respect, unlike the Tendulkar of the 1990s.

The following table perhaps gives the perfect idea about how the things have changed. Before tennis elbow, Tendulkar was averaging more than 62 in India's victories, but since then his contributions have dropping at an alarming rate. He now averages just over 37 in India's victories -- a sharp fall of 25 points!

Tendulkar's contribution in India's victories:
(excluding matches against Zimbabwe and Bangladesh)

Mts Inns NO Runs Avg HS 100 50 0
Before tennis elbow 27 42 7 2188 62.51 194* 8 7 2
After tennis elbow 11 21 2 714 37.58 109 1 6 0

However, despite everything, we all know that Tendulkar still is a force to reckon with and much better than any of the youngsters around. But, honestly speaking, he is nowhere near his best.

But never count a genius out. We all want to believe that Tendulkar can still entertain us for another couple of years, though it all depends how his body responds. It is best to leave it to him to decide when to call it quits.

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Rajneesh Gupta

India In Australia 2024-2025