Will Ponting spark a retirement rush?
Tendulkar contemplating ending career
NEW DELHI, Nov 30, (AFP): Former Australia captain Ricky Ponting’s decision to retire could be the start of an exodus of other batting greats, including Indian maestro Sachin Tendulkar and South Africa’s Jacques Kallis.
With all the leading run-getters in Test cricket in the 35-plus age bracket, the next few years seem set to witness a host of retirements that will leave the game short of batting class and experience.
Ponting, who turns 38 next month, starts his 168th and last Test against South Africa Friday and Tendulkar, who is without a Test century since early last year and will be 40 in April, appears to be next in line to call it quits.
Kallis, West Indian Shivnarine Chanderpaul and Sri Lankan Mahela Jayawardene are also in the autumn of their careers, despite showing terrific form of late.
The five veterans make up half the all-time list of just 10 players to have amassed 10,000 runs or more, along with the already retired Rahul Dravid, Brian Lara, Allan Border, Steve Waugh and Sunil Gavaskar.
Tendulkar, the world’s leading scorer in both Test and one-day cricket and the maker of an unprece- dented 100 international centuries, has already said he has been contemplating ending his iconic 23-year career.
“I am 39 and I don’t think I have plenty of cricket left in me,” he said in a television interview in October.
Asked if he has been thinking of retirement, he replied: “Of course, I have been.
“I am 39 plus and it is not abnormal for me to think of it. At that moment, I will go by what my heart says. At this moment, my heart says I am okay. But you will have to look at series by series.”
It was the first time the recordbreaking Mumbai batsman had spoken of retirement, and a recent run of poor scores has many wondering if the end was drawing closer.
Tendulkar has scored a record 51 Test centuries, but he has now gone 28 innings without a hundred in the five-day format since his 146 against South Africa in Cape Town in January 2011.