Tendulkar almost quit after captaincy debacle

FILE - In this March 2, 2014 file photo, India's cricket icon Sachin Tendulkar stands near a large steel bat which has been unveiled as a monument in his honor, in Mumbai, India. Cricket great Tendulkar considered early retirement after a string of losses while India's captain according to excerpts from the record-holding batsman's autobiography, published on Sunday, Nov. 2, 2014. (AP Photo/Rafiq Maqbool, File)
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AFP, New Delhi :
Sachin Tendulkar felt so “scarred” and “devastated” by the Indian team’s losing streak under his captaincy that he contemplated leaving the game in the late 1990s, the master batsman has written in his autobiography.
In the much-awaited book ‘Playing It My Way’, which will be released on November 6, Tendulkar has spoken about his frustrating captaincy tenure from 1996 to 2000 when he led in 25 Tests, losing nine and winning just four.
“I hated losing and as captain of the team I felt responsible for the string of miserable performances,” Tendulkar wrote in the book, extracts of which were released by the Press Trust of India on Sunday.
“More worryingly, I did not know how I could turn it around, as I was already trying my absolute best. I confided in Anjali (his wife) that I feared there was nothing more that I could do to stem the tide of defeats.
“Losing a string of very close matches had left me badly scarred. I had given it everything and was not sure that I could give even 0.1 per cent more.
“It was hurting me badly and it took me a long time to come to terms with these failures. I even contemplated moving away from the sport completely, as it seemed nothing was going my way.”
Tendulkar, a national icon who played at the top level for 24 years, retired last year as the world’s highest run-getter in both Test and one-day cricket and the only batsman so far to score 100 international centuries.

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