The Free Press Journal

When Sachin detested computer in the dressing room!

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Sachin Tendulkar said he was not too comfortabl­e with the idea of having a computer in the dressing room but came to accept the device after realising how important an aid it was to plan and strategise better.

"I had already played for India for 12-13 years. This was in 2002-03, when computer was brought to our dressing room. We were told that computer is going to store all the data and you will have access to whatever you want to see. I asked, what the computer doing in the dressing room?" he recollecte­d at the Aviva Life Insurance's 'what's your big plan' event.

"Computer is not going to bat for me, it is not going to bowl for Zaheer Khan or Harbhajan (Singh). But Over a period of time I realised that the data stored was accessible within seconds. If I wanted to see how I batted in Australia in 1999, in year 2007, it was available in five seconds.

"If I wanted to see all the straight drives, if I wanted to see all the balls I had left outside the off-stump, it was available. Then I accepted it," he added.

Tendulkar said adapting to the new technology helped him prepare better. "Things have become different. It has helped us plan better against the opposition, whatever their weaknesses or strengths are, it has helped us. It is just about exposure and with time you learn to accept all these things. It has become a way of life for us," he said.

The batting icon interacted with children and encouraged them to follow their dreams and work towards realising them.

"It is really important to have a big plan in life. I wouldn't say that when I was 10 or 11, I knew exactly what was going to happen for the next 20-25 years. But I did have a plan," he said.

He added that the level of satisfacti­on he got from playing cricket cannot be compared with anything else. "Just be true to yourself. Don't try and fool around. It is important that you take life seriously. Yes, you need to enjoy. I played cricket for so many years, I had lot of fun. I enjoyed doing what I wanted to do in life. It gave me the kind of satisfacti­on which cannot be compared with anything else," he said.

Talking about his own kids, Tendulkar said his daughter Sara wants to be a doctor while his son Arjun is passionate about cricket.

"I have always told my children they should become what they want to be in life and they will have our full support. My daughter wants to become a doctor which is a fantastic thing. I am glad she is following her mother's footstep. My son, he is passionate about cricket," he said.

Tendulkar said people have become liberal in career choices and are encouragin­g kids to venture into unconventi­onal territory.

"Things are changing and with time, thinking has also changed...20 or 30 years back, how many parents would have want their child to become a chef. Today we have seen fantastic programmes on television where children are cooking and it is fantastic to watch," he said.

"Something you have got to remember in life, whatever you want to be in life, the journey is never going to be smooth all the time.

“There are going to be rough patches along the way but then you prepare yourself in such a manner that if any obstacle comes in your way, you are following the right path always.

"If you are on the right path, nothing can stop you. All you need to have self belief and deter mination and things will change.”

 ?? SACHIN TENDULKAR ??
SACHIN TENDULKAR

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