Sachin Tendulkar condemned in Indian press in comparison to Muhammad Ali
JUNE 8, 201611:56AM
IF CRICKET is a religion, Sachin Tendulkar is a God.
The Little Master’s divinity as a uniting force that transcends the game of cricket has never truly been questioned — until now.
It took the death of sporting icon Muhammad Ali to give Indian commentators the conviction to share their views on Tendulkar’s shortcomings — which are blatantly exposed when the 43-year-old is compared to The Greatest.
The controversial chorus rallying against Test cricket’s most prolific run-scorer was led by The Indian Express’ Sandeep Dwivedi, who wrote Tendulkar has “breached the trust†of the millions of fans that powered his position as India’s most-loved son.
“What Ali was to the world, Tendulkar is to India,†Dwivedi wrote.
“Ali understood the power and responsibility that accompanied this love. He knew he could push the envelope and get away with it. His fans appreciated that Ali’s courage wasn’t confined to the ring — even without gloves he could take on the non-boxing heavyweights. They were so indebted to Ali for being “anti-national†and talking peace during those frenzied days of war, that they didn’t mind his occasional misjudgements.
“Tendulkar too has that license, but either he isn’t aware of it or is too conservative to use it. He has told friends in private that he avoids taking stands since he doesn’t want to get dragged into controversies or offend people. But not speaking out and wasting a mandate that he has so diligently earned like Ali, is a bigger breach of trust.
The modern sporting legend.Source:Getty Images
“Tendulkar has been a silent spectator during every emotive or divisive controversy India has grappled with.â€
Dwivedi slammed the Test great for claiming to be a passionate Ali fan without ever having the principles to follow in the fight star’s footsteps.
sachin tendulkar ✔ @sachin_rt
My hero since childhood. I always had a wish to meet you some day but now it will never happen. RIP "The Greatestâ€
4:56 AM - 4 Jun 2016
Tendulkar was criticised for offering cheap support without having the courage to back it up.
“It’s said that sportspersons are the product of times,†Dwivedi wrote.
“Ali lived in an era of war, experienced brutal racial bias and suffered due to civil unrest. All this made him an outspoken rebel.
“Today’s sports stars can lose a million dollar contract for a politically wrong utterance. There will be those who will find fault with comparing the sensibilities of an upper class Brahmin who grew up in times of peace and the optimism of post-liberalisation India to an underprivileged black from a period of social unrest who had to deal with the chaos within and around him.
“It’s a lame defence of the present day stars. If Ali was the outspoken outlier, Tendulkar is, almost, the establishment man.â€
Ali was famously sentenced to five years’ imprisonment for his refusal to be conscripted into the US Armed Forces in 1967 after his claim of being a conscientious objector to the Vietnam War was denied.
A true legend.Source:AP
He narrowly avoided a prison sentence after a four-year appeal process and was unable to box for more than three years after being stripped of his boxing license by the New York State Athletic Commission.
The Hindustan Times’ Pradeep Magazine wrote Ali’s career embarrasses all modern athletes in regards to the true social impact of their careers.
“Muhammad Ali was a hero to even me, an incomparable icon who puts to the shade all the (Sir Donald) Bradmans and Tendulkars of this world,†he wrote.
“Ali, the boxer, may have been pursuing a sport that exploits the baser sentiment in human nature but it is Ali the man, all that he symbolised and the price he was willing to pay for his convictions that made him arguably the greatest sportsperson the world has seen.
“For us school-going kids in the early seventies, Ali just barged his way into our subconscious not as a boxing champion but as a man who stood for the underdog and fought for all the injustices of a world dominated by the Whites and the West.
“Ali is the one whose fight with the establishment and standing up to the wrongs of a society and a nation, even at the cost of his career, has in many ways diminished many other legendary sportsmen in other disciplines in our eyes. We expect them, just like Ali once did, to speak up and not count the costs of rebellion. That is why Ali is a hero, a superman for even those who care little for a sport called boxing.â€
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