Inspiring Lessons to learn from Sachin Tendulkar
Tendulkar’s truest talent—the one that has just seen him hit his 50th 
Test hundred and brought him close to a 100 international centuries— is 
not his ability to see the ball early or to pick spin out of a bowler’s 
hand or to hit through gaps in the field or to pace his batting. It is 
his ability to want to do these things over and over again, to better 
how he does them even when he has seemingly perfected them.
This is the talent that helped him avoid the pitfalls in any lengthy 
career. When this particular ability is called hunger, it sounds grand 
and magnificent. The more accurate word—discipline— is also the less 
sexy word. Discipline involves tirelessness and incremental improvement,
 and how can that be worthy of awe and admiration?  Yet, over the last 
two decades, if Tendulkar’s batting has shown us anything, it is the 
sheer virtue of discipline—of the extra half-hour spent in the nets, 
even after younger, spryer colleagues have hit the bars. That discipline
 is why, even at 37, Tendulkar can pile up 1,500 sublime runs in a 
calendar year, enjoying a purple patch that eludes not only freshly 
blooded youngsters but even comparable peers like Ricky Ponting. Such is
 Tendulkar’s effect, in fact, that for many of us who have watched him 
over his international career,his
 discipline is even more attractive than his straight drive; the latter 
is only the mastery of a cricket ball, after all, while the former is 
the mastery of a formidable mind and body. 
What are the lessons Tendulkar offers? We spoke to some cricket crazy CEOs for an insight.
“The most important lesson is the fact that talent without discipline is useless tinsel. It takes you nowhere..
 Companies and entrepreneurs who do not bring in a certain discipline 
and rigour can never succeed. Tendulkar is maniacal about his 
preparation for every single innings he plays be it a crucial test match
 or an inconsequential ODI,” says K Ramkumar, executive director and HR 
head,
He recollects watching him during the 2003 World Cup match against 
Pakistan at Centurion Park when Tendulkar sat alone with his gear 
perhaps visualising the match-winning knock of 98 he eventually played.
“When Australia toured India in 1998 with Shane Warne at his peak, 
Tendulkar realised that his ability to counter the legspin coming out of
 the rough would be crucial. Several weeks before the tour began, he got
 the former India leg spinner L Sivaramakrishnan, who had retired by 
then, to bowl around the wicket and into the rough in the nets,” adds 
Ramkumar.
Although Tendulkar’s two stints as captain proved joyless, he now seems 
to lead the team through his performance without being designated as a 
leader. “Cricket is a game that involves decision-making in the shortest
 possible time between the time the ball leaves the bowler and reaches 
the other end in a fraction of a second.
Sachin has honed his skill at taking decisions to the finest possible level. It is a quality essential for successful leadership. Also leaders need to have capability to have more than one solution to a given problem. Sachin has many, says Harsh Goenka, chairman of RPG Enterprises .
Sachin has honed his skill at taking decisions to the finest possible level. It is a quality essential for successful leadership. Also leaders need to have capability to have more than one solution to a given problem. Sachin has many, says Harsh Goenka, chairman of RPG Enterprises .
“The first and foremost lesson for entrepreneurs is to start young, as Tendulkar did. You
 give yourself that much more time and opportunity to succeed. And if 
you can remain focused and humble, the sky is the limit,” says Raghavendra Rao, the CMD of Chennai-based Orchid Pharmaceuticals.
“Tendulkar epitomises the mindset of wanting to grow from scratch even 
after achieving the greatness threshold. He never tends to cool his 
heels. Companies and CEOs too must always think of starting from scratch
 even when they hit their targets of say $1 billion revenue. His
 greatness is that he does the same thing that he has been doing for the
 last 25 years, but with greater passion every time he takes the field. 
He has never tried his hand at anything other than cricket. He 
feels most secure in his 21/2 square foot home called the batting 
crease,” explains R Suresh, CEO of the executive search firm Stanton 
Chase .
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