should sachin retire?
By alokkalra
@alokkalra (10)
India
October 17, 2006 12:28am CST
I think he should be around for another 4 to 5 yrs. Break all the damn records possible.
9 responses
@chessraam (62)
• India
17 Oct 06
his fitness is good. as long as he is with fitness he can play well. his date birth is just 1973. no need to retire now. he only knows about his body and fitness.
@zubair439 (3183)
• India
17 Oct 06
i think he should play more 3 -4 yrs and after that he should be retire coz he is taking cricket as his personal income and concentrating more on other activities .....
1 person likes this
@kapil_chetri (540)
• India
19 Oct 06
SACHIN RETIRE..PLZ STOP THE NONSENSE..THEN WHOI IS GOING TO SCORE RUNS FOR INDIA..HARBHAJAN SINGH??
@banta78 (4326)
• India
19 Oct 06
I feel best of sachin is yet to come. He is a legend, a class act, his fresh approach to game, his positive attitude. he can surprise everyone with his attacking game like when everybody thought sachin rose and played gems of innings in the last world cup remember the one against pakistan where he dictated terms to the oppostion.
@nanhegujral (4632)
• India
19 Oct 06
yes he should be there for more 3-4 years as he has more cricket left in him.
@raghavibm (543)
• India
19 Oct 06
Don't worry he wiil be there around next 4 r 5 years,, surely in test cricket atleast..
@chessraam (62)
• India
19 Oct 06
When he became the first batsman to score 50 hundreds in international cricket, Sachin Tendulkar established himself as the greatest of all Indian cricketers. Recognised by Sir Donald Bradman as his modern incarnation, Tendulkar has a skill - a genius - which only a handful have possessed. It was not a skill that he was simply born with, but one which was developed by his intelligence and an infinite capacity for taking pains. If there is a secret, it is that Tendulkar has the keenest of cricket minds. At times in a Test series he looks mortal. But he learns every lesson, picks up every cue, dominates the opposing attack sooner or later, and nearly always makes a hundred. His bravery was proved after he was hit on the head on his Test debut in Pakistan, when he was only 16; and his commitment to the Indian cause has never been in doubt. If captaincy - or rather the off-field management of men less skilled than himself - was beyond him at his first attempt, his reading of the game, and his manifold varieties of bowling, have shown the same acute intelligence. His cricket has been played in the right way too, always attacking, and because he knew that was the right way rather than because he was a child of the one-day age, as he himself modestly said. The awe of opponents was as great as that of crowds. But the finest compliment must be that bookmakers would not fix the odds - or a game - until Tendulkar was out. Surpassed Sunil Gavaskar, his guru, as the leading century-maker in Test cricket with his 35th three-figure score in November 2005.
need not to retire now.