Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Has time caught up with Tendulkar?

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NEW DELHI, Sept 4, 2012 (AFP) -Sachin Tendulkar is facing unpreceden­ted calls to retire after a string of failures fuelled speculatio­n that time had finally caught up with India's cricket icon.

Tendulkar, who is now 39, has shouldered the hopes of a nation for 23 years, in the process becoming the world's leading run-getter in both Test and one-day cricket with 100 internatio­nal centuries.

But a string of recent poor scores -- combined with the manner of his dismissals -- has turned sections of the media and a once adoring public against him.

Sunil Gavaskar, the first man to reach the 10,000-run milestone in Tests, suggested during this week's second Test against New Zealand in Bangalore that Tendulkar's reflexes were on the slide Tendulkar, who is now 39, has shouldered the hopes of a nation for 23 years, in the process becoming the world's leading run-getter in both Test and one-day cricket with 100 internatio­nal centuries

NEW DELHI, Sept 4, 2012 (AFP) - Sachin Tendulkar is facing unpreceden­ted calls to retire after a string of failures fuelled speculatio­n that time had finally caught up with India's cricket icon.

Tendulkar, who is now 39, has shouldered the hopes of a nation for 23 years, in the process becoming the world's leading run-getter in both Test and one-day cricket with 100 internatio­nal centuries.

But a string of recent poor scores -- combined with the manner of his dismissals -- has turned sections of the media and a once adoring public against him.

Sunil Gavaskar, the first man to reach the 10,000-run milestone in Tests, suggested during this week's second Test against New Zealand in Bangalore that Tendulkar's reflexes were on the slide.

“The dismissal that was most disturbing was that of the ' master' when he was bowled through the gate,” Gavaskar wrote in his syndicated column.

Pressed further, on air during the second Test, Gavaskar said: “With age, the feet don't come to the pitch of the ball, the eyes don't pick up the ball early.” Former India captain Mohammad Azharuddin also said Tendulkar's feet were not moving well in the crease and he was constantly playing across the line.

“It is clear his reflexes have slowed down,” Azharuddin said.

Tendulkar has scored a record 51 Test centuries but he has now gone 25 innings without a hundred in the five-day game since making 146 against South Africa in Cape Town in January, 2011.

His top score in the recent series against the lowly Kiwis was 27, prompting The Times of India to post pictures of three of his dismissals -- all bowled -- on its front page under the headline: 'What's wrong with India's batting genius?'

An online poll in the Hindustan Times said 56 percent of respondent­s agreed that it was time for Tendulkar to retire.

The Mail Today asked in a frontpage banner headline if it was the “End of the road for Sachin?” And the usually conservati­ve Hindu newspaper also wondered if “Father Time was catching up with the maestro”.

Tendulkar has consistent­ly dismissed any thought of retirement and told reporters last week that he still loved the game and enjoyed playing at the top level.

He is the last remnant of a fabled Indian middle or- der after both Rahul Dravid and VVS Laxman retired in the last 12 months. Sourav Ganguly, the other member of the quartet, quit in 2008.

Ganguly, who played alongside Tendulkar for almost two decades, said speculatio­n over Tendulkar's future in the game was uncalled for.

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 ??  ?? Sachin Tendulkar
Sachin Tendulkar
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 ??  ?? Mohammed Azharuddin
Mohammed Azharuddin

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