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NEW DELHI: Sachin Tendulkar takes guard in a Test match for the first time as a member of parliament when India begin a new home season this week, aiming to rebuild their damaged reputation.
A two-match series against lowly New Zealand, starting in Hyderabad on Thursday, is an appetiser for the main course — four Tests each against England and Australia, who both thumped India 4-0 over the past year.
Mahendra Singh Dhoni’s men will seek to avenge those drubbings in England and Australia. India was dethroned as the top-ranked Test side and has now slipped to fifth.
“We need to return to winning ways and we have the team to do it,” outgoing chairman of selectors Krishnamachari Srikkanth informed. “I have great hope for the future.
“Tendulkar, 39, the world’s leading batsman with an unprecedented 100 international centuries, was in April nominated to the upper house of parliament, the Rajya Sabha, for his contribution to the nation.
The record-breaking batsman, who made his Test debut in 1989, insisted the honour would not distract him from contributing to the team’s resurgence.
“It is an honour to be nominated to parliament. I have not fought an election,” Tendulkar said in a recent interview. “But I am an active cricketer and I will be focused on the game.”
Tendulkar is the last of a core group of Indian batting pillars still playing, following the retirements of Rahul Dravid and VVS Laxman, which have left a gaping hole in the middle order.
Dravid quit in March after a brilliant 16-year career during which he scored 13,288 runs and 36 centuries in 164 Tests.
Laxman, who also played for 16 years, decided to hang up his boots on Saturday, just days before he was due to play the first Test against New Zealand before his home fans in Hyderabad.
With two senior players having gone, media focus is centred around whether Tendulkar will bid farewell before the season ends next March.
Tendulkar has not played five-day cricket since the fourth Test against Australia in Adelaide in January, and even opted out of the recent limited-overs series in Sri Lanka.
The leading run-getter in both Test and one-day cricket would not hazard a guess on how the upcoming home season would pan out for India, saying he preferred taking it one game at a time.
Agence France-Presse
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