Tendulkar not finished as yet: Manjrekar

September 05, 2012 04:27 pm | Updated November 16, 2021 09:46 pm IST - New Delhi

Bangalore : 29/8/2012 . Indian cricketer Sachin Tendulkar during the practice session ahead of of India and New Zealand test match at Chinnaswamy stadium in Bangalore on 29th August, 2012.  Photo : K . Bhagya Prakash

Bangalore : 29/8/2012 . Indian cricketer Sachin Tendulkar during the practice session ahead of of India and New Zealand test match at Chinnaswamy stadium in Bangalore on 29th August, 2012. Photo : K . Bhagya Prakash

With age not on his side, Sachin Tendulkar has become vulnerable to full length deliveries but he is “not finished” as yet and is still good enough to score runs at the highest level, feels former cricketer Sanjay Manjrekar.

Tendulkar, 40, was bowled thrice in four innings in the just concluded India-New Zealand Test series, prompting many to announce his end as a quality batsman.

Manjrekar felt that Tendulkar still adds value to Indian batting line-up and he must be a part of the Indian side which will tour South Africa in November.

“To me, the way Tendulkar got out in his three innings against New Zealand does not suggest by any stretch of the imagination that he is finished as an international batsman.

“I will stand by what I have said all along about Tendulkar: that his run-making at the international level will stop only when he stops playing. Until then, he may not dominate as he used to but he will still be a good enough batsman to get runs at the highest level, and to add value to the Indian team, especially in Test cricket,” Manjrekar wrote in his column for Cricinfo

Manjrekar argued that Tendulkar is not first batsman who is struggling with full length deliveries and the fighter in him will surely sort out this batting problem.

“I have seen with great players as they age that it’s the full delivery that seems to bother them more than short ones.

Short balls land on the pitch well before full-length ones do, so their mystery is revealed to the batsman earlier.

“Watching a ball from the point of release to almost right under your eyes is not easy to do; great batsmen do it as a matter of habit, but with age they have to remind themselves to keep doing it right through their innings.

“Tendulkar is not the first great ageing player who is finding the full ball a bit of a handful. Other outstanding batsmen have had the same problems — Javed Miandad and Gundappa Viswanath, and more recently Dravid and VVS Laxman among them,” Manjrekar explained.

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