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Tendulkar wants Americans to pick up cricket bats

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By Arun Kumar 

Washington: India’s master blaster Sachin Tendulkar who is eyeing America as the next target in his mission to spread cricket, said he would like to see more Americans picking up cricket bats along with baseball bats.

“You’ll only learn things if you give them a try,” said Tendulkar who will lead a ten-day, three-city cricket all-star exhibition tour of the US in November with fellow cricket legend Shane Warne of Australia.

“Americans are used to watching baseball, and it’s very similar to that,” he told Time magazine.

“If Americans can start coming to the stadium, I wouldn’t be surprised to see them following cricket from here on.”

The tour’s impact, Tendulkar said, will be measured by how many it inspires. “I’m not just looking forward to this trip but to my next trip,” he said.

“I would like to see how many more people have picked up a cricket bat alongside a baseball bat. Because that means we left an impression behind. That’s something I want to do,” he said.

“America will be curious to see what it’s like to experience the game of cricket,” said Warne. “What’s all the fuss about? Why is it the second most popular game in the world? What’s so special about this game?”

Tendulkar and Warne will each captain a team consisting of some of the best international players of the past 35 years, in three matches scheduled to be played in US baseball stadiums.

The tour in partnership with US sports marketing company Leverage Agency will feature Twenty20 matches at New York’s Citi Field on November 7, Houston’s Minute Maid Park on November 11, and Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles on November 14.

Pakistan’s Wasim Akram, South Africa’s Shaun Pollock, Brian Lara of Trinidad and Tobago and Mahela Jayawardene of Sri Lanka are among the other all-time greats slated to join the cricket barnstorming tour.

Besides hoping to fill up ballparks, the players plan to conduct clinics in each stop to teach Americans about cricket.

The US has pockets of cricket passion in places like New York and Washington, DC, particularly among immigrants from the West Indies and South Asia, Time magazine noted.

Estimates have put America’s cricket fan base at 15 million. “People are starving for a big cricket event like this,” Ben Sturner, CEO of Leverage Agency, which is producing the tour, was quoted as saying.

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Sunil Gavaskar gives his opinion of GT allrounder Rahul Tewatia

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The left-handed batsman from Haryana is garnering praise from all quarters for the way he’s finishing games regularly in the most exciting IPL season.

Gavaskar reckons Tewatia’s whirlwind knock in Sharjah (in IPL 2020) where he smashed West Indies pacer Sheldon Cottrell for five sixes in an over, gave him the confidence that he belongs to the big stage.

Speaking on Cricket Live on Star Sports, Gavaskar said, “That assault on Sheldon Cottrell in Sharjah gave him the belief to do the impossible and the confidence that he belongs here. We saw the impossible (he did with the bat) the other day as well. There’s no twitching or touching the pads (which shows a batter’s nervousness) when he bats in the death overs. He just waits for the ball to be delivered and plays his shots. He’s got all the shots in the book, but most importantly his temperament to stay cool in a crisis is brilliant.”

Gavaskar has also nicknamed the 28-year-old cricketer the ‘ice-man’ and lauded Tewatia’s ability to remain unruffled during the tense moments.

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