New Delhi:Former India head coach Anshuman Gaekwad had the best seat in the house as he witnessed Sachin Tendulkar's "peak" from close quarters in the late 90s and early 2000s. It was a phase when Tendulkar made the best of the bowlers looked ordinary, whether it was taking Shane Warne to the cleaners on a turning track, or negotiating Saqlain Mushtaq's magical doosra.
In a chat with PTI ahead of Tendulkar's 50th birthday, Gaekwad fondly recalled the time spent in the dressing room with the little master during the memorable home series against Pakistan in 1999, the 'Desert Storm' in Sharjah the year before, and his first meeting with a 15-year-old Sachin during a Ranji Trophy game in the late 80s. Tendulkar was a child prodigy who made waves in Mumbai school cricket and going by Gaekwad's first interaction with him, the "incredibly curious" kid was always destined for greatness.
"It makes me happy to say that we have played Ranji together, it was my last year. One of the Mumbai cricketers brought him to me (for advice). It was a game in Thane and I sat with him for about 45-45 minutes and the whole time he listened and did not blink once. "That itself gave me an indication that he wanted to be somebody in the game. He was not listening, it looked as if he was drinking what I was saying. Very patient and concentrating," said the former India opener who played 40 Tests and 15 ODIs.
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Tendulkar made his Ranji debut aged 15 years and 232 days during the 1988-89 season, and soon after, he found himself facing the likes of Wasim Akram and Waqar Younis in his debut series in Pakistan. A decade later, Gaekwad shared the dressing room with Tendulkar during his two stints as India head coach between 1998 and 2000, covering some of the defining moments in the batting legend's 24-year long international career.
The moments included India's series win against Australia in 1998, when Warne toured the sub-continent for the first time, the drawn series against Pakistan, the Coco Cola Cup in Sharjah, and a disappointing campaign in the 1999 World Cup. Besides his mastery with the bat, Gaekwad said the mere presence of Tendulkar on the field made a massive difference. One such instance was the Chennai Test against Pakistan that India lost despite one of the best knocks from a half-fit Tendulkar.