

However, the two ignored the instruction and attacked until lunch. By the evening Tendulkar had 192 and Kambli 182 runs and their coach, who could not be there on the second day, instructed the two batsmen to make the declaration in the morning and thus go on to bowling. St Xavier's managed to remove two batsman first before Tendulkar joined Kambli on the beat. Against their opponent St Xavier's High School Tendulkar and his teammate Vinod Kambli, who later also played for the Indian national team, were to be expected as the dominant batsman.

The highlight was the appearance in the semi-finals of the Harris Shield on 23-25.

He also shone again in school competitions. He was also nominated for the zonal youth selection team and was able to achieve numerous Centuries there. Mainly, however, he played under the guidance of the national player Sandeep Patil for their youth teams and got so numerous opportunities. As a result, he was occasionally used as a substitute for the team, but initially not as a regular player. This was also noticed by those responsible for the selection team from Bombay and so they invited Tendulkar on Novemto take part in their training. He reached 2,336 runs in school competitions, including numerous Centuries and two double Centuries (200 runs in one innings). His breakthrough as a player for his school, the Shardashram Vidyamandir School, came in the 1986/87 season at the age of 13. At the age of eleven he scored his first fifty (50 runs in one innings ) and the following year in the Indian school championship, the Harris Shield, the first century (100 runs in one innings). His coach realized that Sachin preferred to hit the ball hard, which is why he was used as a batsman. At the age of nine he began playing cricket on his school team. It was named after his father's favorite composer, Sachin Dev Burman. Sachin Tendulkar was born in 1973 to Ramesh Tendulkar, a college teacher writer and poet, and his mother Rajni, who worked in the insurance industry.
