Sachin Tendulkar was also the Man with Golden Arm

Cricketers across world were afraid of his batting skills, but the God of Cricket, Sachin was also the Man with Golden Arms.

Sachin Tendulkar was an unorthodox bowler and has 154 wickets from his 463 matches.  Tendulkar has two five-wicket hauls and his best was 5 for 32 against Australia in Kochi, 1998.

Tendulkar could have earned more wickets, but a tennis elbow put paid to that.

He underwent an operation in 2005 for tennis elbow in England and since then he cut down on his bowling but always obliged his captains when a partnership needed to be broken.

Being an unorthodox bowler, Tendulkar was always attacked and the batsmen had to pay the price.

Tendulkar first bowled in an ODI against England at Trent Bridge in 1990. He conceded 10 runs from just one over that he got as India won the match by five wickets.

He bagged his first man of the match award as a bowler in 1994 against the West Indies in Sharjah. He picked up four for 34 dismissing Clayton Lambert, Richie Richardson, Gus Logie and Jeff Dujon, to skittle out West Indies for 141. India won the match easily by seven wickets.

No one can forget the famous Hero Cup semi-final against South Africa at Kolkata in 1993. South Africa needed six off the last over and India skipper Mohammed Azharuddin gambled by asking Tendulkar to bowl the final over. Tendulkar gave away just three runs from the only over he bowled to leave the South Africans confused with his unorthodox spin.

Like his batting, Tendulkar also preserved his best bowling for against Australia. At Kochi in 1998, India set Australia a target of 310. The Australians were going great guns but a great spell by Tendulkar (5/32), who picked up the formidable quartet of Steve Waugh, Michael Bevan, Darren Lehmann and Damien Martyn, helped India win by 41 runs.

Tendulkar’s best bowling performances have come on home soil and in most of those matches he had failed as a batsman. And in most cases, the bowler in Tendulkar boosted his confidence as a batsman. Whenever the runs dried up, Tendulkar took to bowling.

It was in the last seven years that he cut down on his bowling after undergoing a surgery in London in 2005.

The last time he bagged wickets was in 2007 against Pakistan in Guwahati. He bagged two for 32 from his five overs as India won the match by five wickets.

Best bowling performances:

4 for 34 against West Indies during 1991 at Sharjah
3 for 43 against Sri Lanka during 1994 at Rajkot
3 for 36 against West Indies during 1994 at Chennai
5 for 32 against Australia during 1998 at Kochi
4 for 38 against Australia during 1998 at Dhaka
5 for 50 against Pakistan during 2005 at Kochi