| Tendulkar
regrets loss of one-day opening role
Colombo, September 27: Sachin Tendulkar says he
would still prefer to open the batting in one-day internationals,
conceding that he is not entirely comfortable coming in at number
four.
"Personally,
given the choice I will open the innings," the world's leading
batsman said on Friday.
"That
is where I have felt most comfortable and that is where I have scored
the maximum number of runs. Yes I would like to open, but the team's
requirement is different."
The 29-year-old,
currently with India at the ICC Champions Trophy in Sri Lanka, has
made most of his world record one-day aggregate of 11,537 runs and
33 centuries after being promoted to open eight years ago.
Tendulkar said
the team management's decision to push him down the order had forced
him into a change of style.
"It is
a completely different role...there (as an opener) the bowlers hadn't
bowled a ball, I hadn't faced a single ball, I had a chance to dictate
my terms. Now when I go in, the terms are set for me.
"But I am willing to adapt because the team needs it."
Promoted to
opener in a 1994 tournament in New Zealand, he batted at the top
of the order in 193 of his 298 matches, scoring 8,743 runs and making
30 centuries. He bats at four in tests.
Tendulkar moved
back down during the West Indies series earlier this year in order
to bolster the middle-order and the strategy is expected to remain
until next year's World Cup in South Africa.
The change
has added depth to India's batting, with young Virender Sehwag easing
into the role as a pinch-hitting opener.
India won their
Caribbean one-day series and a tri-series in England in July and
have reached the final of the Champions Trophy in Sri Lanka mainly
because of their powerful batting.
Some former
Indian test players have also argued for Tendulkar to continue as
opener but others argue Tendulkar's batting at four has given added
confidence to the rest of the batsmen.
Tendulkar,
though, said: "It's the players who have done the job...not
worrying about whether this guy is going to follow me or bat before
me. They deserve a big congrats."
Tendulkar said
Sehwag, who has emerged as one of the stars of this 12-team event,
needed full backing to ensure he continued to bat aggressively.
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