Sachin Tendulkar: India legend's final Test under way

The final Test in the career of Indian cricket legend Sachin Tendulkar is under way in his home city of Mumbai.
The 40-year-old record run-scorer in Tests and one-day internationals will quit all cricket after India's second Test - his 200th - against West Indies.
Tendulkar has scored an unprecedented 100 international hundreds in his 24-year career and helped India win the World Cup in 2011.
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There will not be another Sachin Tendulkar - he was the best batsman of my generation
Shane WarneLeg-spin legend
India, who lead the two-match series 1-0, won the toss and chose to field.
Tendulkar's final match caps a month-long outpouring of emotion from a cricket-mad nation of 1.2 billion people which started when he confirmed that the series against West Indies would be his last.
Such has been the interest in Tendulkar's final match that a website selling tickets crashed shortly after opening, receiving 19.7 million hits in the first hour.
Fans have staged protests against the fact that only 5,000 of the 33,000 tickets went on public sale, with the remainder of the seats being filled by politicians, celebrities, former players and corporate guests.
The area around the Wankhede Stadium has been plastered with posters and murals of the player dubbed the "Little Master".
Tendulkar's wife, Anjali, has joked that they may require a museum to house all the gifts and mementos.
Meanwhile, tributes have been flocking in from some of Tendulkar's most illustrious contemporaries.
West Indies great Brian Lara described the India star as "the Muhammad Ali and the Michael Jordan of cricket".
Ticket for Sachin Tendulkar's last match
Tickets for Tendulkar's final match have been hard to come by - only 5,000 went on public sale
Lara, who scored 11,953 runs in 131 Tests, added: "Tendulkar has had the greatest cricket career of anyone who has ever played the game."
Former Australia Shane Warne also praised the prolific batsman.
"There will not be another Sachin Tendulkar," Warne, who took 708 Test wickets, wrote in his Daily Telegraph column.  "He was the best batsman of my generation."

Tendulkar in numbers

Born: April 24, 1973, Mumbai
International debut: Nov 1989 v Pakistan
Test matches: 199
He has scored 15,847 runs at an average of53.71, hitting 51 tons and 67 half centuries.
One-day internationals: 463
He has scored 18,426 runs at an average of 44.83and a strike rate of 86.23. He has scored 49 centuries (highest score 200) and 96 fifties
The hysteria surrounding Tendulkar has overshadowed a milestone for West Indies batsman Shivnarine Chanderpaul, who will be playing his 150th Test.
The 39-year-old left-hander, however, said it was a "privilege" just to be sharing the stage with the Indian on such a momentous occasion.
"We have watched him over the years. It is always a joy to look at him bat even though he is batting against us," said Chanderpaul, who has scored 10,897 runs at an average of 51.89.
"There is so much you can learn from a legend like him. He is a master of batting. His art, his skill and looking at him you can learn a lot."
West Indies captain Darren Sammy said his bowlers were competing to be the last man to dismiss Tendulkar.
"From the moment we heard it is going to be his last Test in Mumbai, all the bowlers were quite motivated," he said.
"There is a chance to go down in history. The last stroke he would play in any cricket match and your name could go down in there."