First things first
- Its easy to run down anyone - its probably easier to run down great people - surely is going to get one more attention
- Its easy to find flaws in a career that lasts very long.
- Its easy to run down those who are deified - those who treat them as Gods are probably asking for it in the first place
- Sachin is going. Too early - hardly. Too late - perhaps. Does that matter - not today, not any more - except, perhaps, in an academic debate.
I called up my sons in Switzerland to inform them. The younger one was more distressed because he was a more die hard fan but the elder was very sad too. I am sure they do not watch much cricket nowadays but Sachin and Indian cricket is a constant whenever we meet and talk. Sachin was their idol not mine. I was in my 40th year when he made his debut while they were in their early teens. That is the age when you make idols - sporting ones at least. My sons are just a year or two younger than him but his playing the game so early is what made him their idol. They were at that age.
Gavaskar and Vishwanath were older than me by the same time-gap as SRT is from my boys but they were not my idols either. I was 21 and 20 respectively when those two made their India debuts. Funnily all three alr "Little" masters.
My idol was the dashing, flamboyant and incomparably stylish (to an eleven year old's eyes) ML Jaisimha. I remember being told a few years later of what his initials stood for (Motganhalli Laxmirassu) and hated the friend who informed me. It did not fit, to my North Indian ears, the handsome image of my hero.
Coming back to Sachin. Its a sad day to see, on the Indian Express, a full front page picture of the great man "walking away in the sun" as it were - but really it is a day to celebrate and rejoice in the innumerable moments, hours, and days of pleasure this remarkable young man has given us. We will have enough opportunities, here, and in bars across the world, to discuss the merits and demerits of Imran, Lara and Ponting and so on.
SRT was not just not my idol, I have also often been on the other side of the debate when he was being compared to other cricketing greats of the modern and earlier eras but that does not stop me from realising that it would be amiss to go into all that today of all days.
It would be so much nicer to read what the great man meant to all of us. Surely that would take some writing as well :o)