Saturday, November 16, 2013

Sachin Tendulkar named 'Person of the Week' by Time magazine


Sachin Tendulkar
Sachin Tendulkar, who made an impressive 74 runs in his 200th and last Test, had previously been named 'Person of the Moment' by Time.

PTI : New York, Sat Nov 16 2013, 12:45 hrs


Global adulation continued to pour in for Sachin Tendulkar, as after being named Person of the Moment, Time magazine has now conferred the retiring batting legend with the 'Person of the Week' honour.

Tendulkar, who will be retiring after playing his 200th Test and the ongoing Test against West Indies at Mumbai, garnered the maximum number of votes in an online poll, edging past contenders like Chinese President Xi Jinping and US Federal Reserve head nominee Janet Yellen.
Tendulkar, who made an impressive 74 runs in his 200th and last Test, had previously been named 'Person of the Moment' by Time.

The US magazine had asked readers to vote online in a poll for 'Person of the Week' for the week of November 10 and the 40 year-old got 54 votes, 88 per cent votes, way ahead of Yellen who got 13.41 per cent votes and Jinping with 6.1 per cent votes.

"Sachin Tendulkar, India's top cricketer and widely considered the greatest of his generation, played his final Test match before retirement," the magazine said.

Tendulkar's stellar 24-year cricketing career boasts of innumerable records and milestones which would be hard to surpass.
Tendulkar was showered with adulation not only in India but across the world with leading US dailies paying rich tributes to the master blaster for his "supreme batsmanship"
and "unwavering modesty" and describing him as "irreplacable".

Time magazine had also put out a special online feature highlighting Tendulkar's 10 greatest moments, including his first 100 in 1990 against England, his 2001 against Australia when he became the first player ever to score 10,000 runs in the one-day format, his unprecedented 200 runs in a single innings in an ODI against South Africa in 2010 and the 2011 World Cup win.


School children wave holding posters of cricketer Sachin Tendulkar at an event to honour him inside a school in Chennai on Thursday. Sachin is playing his last 200th test match against West Indies at his home ground in Wankhede Stadium. Photo: PTI
School children wave holding posters of cricketer Sachin Tendulkar at an event to honour him inside a school in Chennai on Thursday. Sachin is playing his last 200th test match against West Indies at his home ground in Wankhede Stadium. Photo: PTI


Accolades continued to pour in for the retiring Sachin Tendulkar with the ‘Time’ magazine naming the legendary Indian batsman its “Person of the Moment” while as he plays his last Test in Mumbai.
“The world’s greatest cricketer plays his last match...much to the disappointment of throngs of adoring fans,” The magazine said of the 40-year-old, who will bid adieu to cricket after playing his 200th test currently being played against the West Indies in Mumbai.
“India’s top cricket player, Sachin Tendulkar, is regarded one of the greatest batsman of all time. The only player to score 100 international centuries, Tendulkar leaves the sport as the greatest player of his generation,” ‘Time’ said.
Tendulkar’s stellar 24-year cricketing career boasts of innumerable records and milestones which would be hard to surpass.
He has been showered with adulation not only in India but across the world with leading US dailies paying rich tributes to the master blaster for his “supreme batsmanship” and “unwavering modesty”.
’Time’ magazine also put out a special online feature highlighting Tendulkar’s 10 greatest moments, including his first 100 in 1990 against England, his 2001 game against Australia when he became the first player ever to score 10,000 runs in the one-day format, his unprecedented 200 runs in a single innings in a one-day international game against South Africa in 2010 and the 2011 World Cup win.
Another Time article said as the little Master plays his last Test match there is “as much a celebration of a great batsman as a poignant meditation on the vacuum he will leave behind.”
It said when Tendulkar’s last match is over, “a nation will have to be content with its memories.”



















































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