advertisement
The man who shaped one of the greatest batsmen cricket has ever seen is no more.
Of all the people to have been touched by the mentorship of Ramakant Achrekar – and there were thousands – none owed a greater debt of gratitude than one Sachin Ramesh Tendulkar, who was taken in by the coach at Mumbai’s Shivaji Park as a teenager.
Tendulkar would go on to rewrite the record books in the sport, but remembered Achrekar through his climb to the summit of modern-day batsmanship.
The Master Blaster sent out an emotional release after the passing of his childhood coach in Mumbai on Wednesday, 2 January, at the age of 86.
Achrekar’s contribution to cricket in Mumbai – as indeed all over the country – was honoured with the Dronacharya award in 1990, and the Padma Shri in 2010.
In his statement, Tendulkar thanked his mentor for teaching him the ‘ABCD of cricket’, and hoped for Achrekar to take his tutorial to the heavens above:
Over the years, Tendulkar has made several references to Achrekar, paying tribute to his coach for contributing to the legend he would come to be known as.
Born in 1932, Achrekar had a fledgling playing career, taking the field in only one first-class match for all-India State Bank against Hyderabad in 1963/64, but built a burgeoning reputation as a coach to thousands of budding cricketers spanning generations at Mumbai’s Shivaji Park.
(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)