It's not a big blunder, but it rankles nonetheless. Other sportsmen do far worse, from philandering to actual cheating to selling their opinions for money to fixing the outcomes of games, and Sachin's is really no great sin.
The reason it sits uneasily on all of us is because it's the first time we've seen the man do something wrong.
We've laughed off allegations, pooh-poohed rumours, picked fights with friends lacking in worship, but this time we all witnessed Tendulkar slipping up and doing something that, while legally permissible and well within his rights, is just not cricket. Memorability be damned, one does not sell a present.
Like I said, it's a teensy offence, and we'll willingly forget. We're dying to, in fact. We'll look past it and wince when some moron mentions it simply to bait us, but that'll be that.
Gods, as evidenced in any mythology, frequently screwed up and, while our forgiveness might have meant not a jot, earned favor again soon enough. This is but a thoughtless move we wouldn't have noticed coming from anyone except this one man we unfairly look on as flawless.
And yet, there he bats, a fallen God. The day he hits that hundred, we'll rush right back in and leave our slippers at the door, but for now he has to sweat it out without our constantly chanted help.
We did all hold our breath for him last Monday, but we believed a tad less fervently. And it's up to him now to win us back over into that zone of unquestioned awesomeness.
I'd say it'll take him a week or so.
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