List of career achievements by Sachin Tendulkar

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Sachin Tendulkar

This page presents some of the notable achievements of Sachin Tendulkar, a former Indian cricketer, universally regarded as one of the best batsmen of all time. Debates on Tendulkar's precise rank amongst his predecessors are unlikely to conclude soon. He was the sport's first batsman to score a double century (200 runs not out) in a single One Day International match, and is so far the only player to have scored 100 centuries in internationals. He played first-class cricket for 26 years and one day, whilst his international career spanned exactly 24 years from 15 November 1989 to 16 November 2013.[1]

Honours

Career and annual awards

Awards from the media

  • In August 2003, he was voted as the "Greatest Sportsman" of the country in the sport personalities category in the Best of India poll conducted by Zee News.[10]
  • In November 2006, Time magazine named him as one of the Asian Heroes.[11]
  • In December 2006, he was named "Sports Person of the Year"
  • In June 2009, Time magazine included his test debut in "Top 10 Sporting Moments".[12]
  • In 2010, he was voted as one of the world's 100 most influential people in "The 2010 Time 100" poll conducted by Time magazine.[13]
  • The India Poised campaign run by The Times of India nominated him as the "Face of New India" next to the likes of Amartya Sen and Mahatma Gandhi.[when?]
  • In February 2010, he was declared "Sports Icon of the Year for 21 years" at the NDTV Indian of the Year Awards.[14]

Awards for individual matches and series

Tendulkar has won a record 15

Man of the Match (MoM) awards in ODI Matches.[15] He has won a Man of the Match Award against every one of the ICC Full Members (Test Playing Nations). The only teams against whom he has not won an ODI Man of the Match award, are the United Arab Emirates (2 matches played), the Netherlands (1 match) and Bermuda
(1 match).

Man of the Match

S No Opponent Venue Season Match performance
1 England Old Trafford, Manchester 1990 1st Innings: 68 (8×4); 2 catches
2nd Innings: 119 (17×4)
2 England Chepauk, IN Chennai 1992/93 1st Innings: 165 (24×4, 1×6); 2–1–5–0
2nd Innings: 2 catches; 2–1–4–0
3
New Zealand
Chepauk, Chennai 1995/96 1st Innings: 52 (5×4)
4
Australia
Chepauk, Chennai 1997/98 1st Innings: 4 (1×4); 1 catch
2nd Innings: 155 (14×4, 4×6)
5
Pakistan
Chepauk, Chennai 1998/99 1st Innings: 0; 3–0–10–1
2nd Innings: 136 (18×4); 7–1–35–2
6
New Zealand
Motera, Ahmedabad
1999/00 1st Innings: 217 (29×4)
2nd Innings: 15 (3×4); 5–2–19–0
7
Australia
MCG, Melbourne 1999/00 1st Innings: 116 (9×4, 1×6)
2nd Innings: 52 (4×4)
8
South Africa
Wankhede, Mumbai 1999/00 1st Innings: 97 (12×4, 2×6); 5–1–10–3
2nd Innings: 8 (2×4); 1–0–4–0
9 West Indies Eden Gardens, Kolkata 2002/03 1st Innings: 36 (7×4); 7–0–33–0
2nd Innings: 176 (26×4)
10
Australia
SCG, Sydney 2003/04 1st Innings: 241 (33×4)
2nd Innings: 60 (5×4); 6–0–36–0; 1 catch
11
Australia
Adelaide 2007/09 1st Innings: 153
2nd Innings: 13 100
12
New Zealand
Hamilton 2009 1st Innings: 160
2nd Innings: DNB

Man of the Series awards

S.no Season Series Performance
1
India
Test Series)
1997/98 446 runs ( 5 Innings, 2×100, 1×50); 13.2–1–48–1; 2 catches
2
Australia
Test Series)
1999/00 278 runs (6 Innings, 1×100, 2×50); 9–0–46–1
3
India
Test Series
2001/02 307 runs (4 Innings, 1×100, 2×50); 17–3–50–1; 4 catches
4 India in Bangladesh Test Series 2007 254 runs (3 Innings, 2×100 ); 13.3–1–57–3; 4 catches[16]
5
India
Test Series)
2010 403 runs (4 Innings, 1×100, 2×50)

Total Man of the Match awards by opposition

# Opponent Total Man of match Total games home Total games away Total games neutral
1
Australia
(154 matches)
21 60 18 55
2
Bangladesh
(30 matches)
18 09 10 11
3 England (170 matches) 29 85 16 40
4
New Zealand
(12 matches)
6 4 2 0
5
Pakistan
(66 matches)
18 22 55 15
6
South Africa
(57 matches)
5 4 1 0
7
Sri Lanka
(84 matches)
6 1 2 3
8 West Indies (39 matches) 9 3 1 5
9
Zimbabwe
(34 matches)
8 0 4 4
10
Kenya
(10 matches)
4 2 0 2
11
Namibia
(1 match)
1 0 0 1
Total (463 ODI matches) 125 23 13

See also

References

  1. ^ Former Indian Cricketer Sachin Tendulkar Personal And Professional Interesting Facts. Divyabhaskar.co.in (24 April 2016). Retrieved on 2016-11-24.
  2. ^ "Ministry of Youth & Sports Affairs – Arjuna Awards in Cricket". Government of India. Archived from the original on 25 February 2007. Retrieved 21 March 2007.
  3. ^ "CRICKETER OF THE YEAR 1997 – Sachin Tendulkar". Wisden Almanack. Retrieved 21 March 2007.
  4. Rediff
    . 13 August 1998. Retrieved 21 March 2007.
  5. ^ "Tendulkar conferred Padma Shri". ESPNcricinfo. 22 March 1999. Retrieved 21 March 2007.
  6. ^ "National Portal of India". www.india.gov.in. Archived from the original on 31 January 2008.
  7. ^ "Sachin Tendulkar Biography". thegreatbiography.com/. 10 September 2019. Retrieved 6 October 2019.
  8. ^ "Sachin Tendulkar, Allan Donald inducted into ICC's Hall of Fame". The Hindu. 19 July 2019.
  9. ^ "2020". Laureus.
  10. ^ "Indiantelevision.com's Breaking News : Amitabh, Ruchita Patel (Mowgli top Zee News 'Best of India' poll". Us.indiantelevision.com. 16 August 2003. Archived from the original on 23 April 2008. Retrieved 2 August 2013.
  11. ^ "60 Years of Asian Heroes". Time. 13 November 2006. Archived from the original on 12 November 2007.
  12. ^ "Top 10 Sporting Moments". Time. 16 June 2009. Archived from the original on 15 October 2009.
  13. ^ "The 2010 Time 100". Time. 29 April 2010. Archived from the original on 2 May 2010.
  14. ^ "Video – Online Videos, News Videos Clips, Watch News Video Online from". NDTV.com. Retrieved 2 August 2013.
  15. ^ "Sachin Tendulkar – MoM & MoS Awards in ODI Cricket". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 22 March 2007. {{cite web}}: Check |url= value (help)
  16. ^ 2nd Test: Bangladesh v India at Dhaka, May 25–27, 2007 | Cricket Scorecard. ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved on 16 April 2020

External links