HomeBooksBook Extract | Test Cricket: A Biography: The Story of Test Cricket 1877 to Today by Tim Wigmore

Book Extract | Test Cricket: A Biography: The Story of Test Cricket 1877 to Today by Tim Wigmore

In India, Tendulkar became ubiquitous in a manner that not even Gavaskar had rivalled. Only when driving around Mumbai in the early hours could he roam freely.

May 02, 2025 / 18:06 IST
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The maidans are a characteristic of Indian cricket; their preva- lence helps to explain the abundance of Test players, especially batters, from Mumbai
The maidans are a characteristic of Indian cricket; their preva- lence helps to explain the abundance of Test players, especially batters, from Mumbai

Book Extract

Excerpted with permission from Test Cricket: A Biography: The Story of Test Cricket 1877 to Today by Tim Wigmore, published by Hachette India.
THE TWO AGES OF TENDULK AR

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Late in his life, Sir Donald Bradman identified the batter who played most like him. ‘I was very, very struck by his technique,’ Bradman said in 1996. ‘I asked my wife to come and have a look at him. Because, I said, “I never saw myself play. But I feel this fellow is playing much the same as I used to.”
‘It was just his compactness, his stroke production, his technique.

It all seemed to gel.’
The player’s name was Sachin Tendulkar.
Bradman later invited Tendulkar to his 90th birthday. ‘We dis- cussed batting,’ Tendulkar recalls. ‘How good batters could read the ball by looking at the bowler’s wrist position and also see which way the ball is spinning in the air and hence could read the delivery as soon as it was released.’
The man who would become the heaviest run-scorer in Test his- tory was first glimpsed on the maidans in Mumbai in the mid-1980s. Most days, the young Tendulkar – his father was a poet and univer- sity professor; his mother worked for the Life Insurance Corporation of India – boarded bus number 315 from the suburb of Bandra East to Shivaji Park.