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Rediff.com  » Cricket » Waugh rates Lara, Tendulkar on equal terms
This article was first published 11 years ago

Waugh rates Lara, Tendulkar on equal terms

August 02, 2013 10:35 IST

Image: Brian Lara and Sachin Tendulkar

Former Australian captain Steve Waugh feels both West Indies’ Brian Lara and India’s Sachin Tendulkar are on equal terms because they played in different conditions and under different sort of pressures.

"I hate comparisons between players because it unnecessarily creates controversy. Both played under differentpressure and for different teams. I would place them pretty much on equal terms," Waugh told reporters during an interaction organised by Brigade Orchards.

Lara and Tendulkar were unbelievable players, who won games for their teams, playing under different conditions, Waugh said.

"Sachin was carrying on his shoulders amazing pressure of 1.3 billion people. Brian obviously was the best player in a weak team," he added.

'Dhoni has got so much of magical touch'

Image: MS Dhoni
Photographs: BCCI

Another former Australian captain, Ricky Ponting had rated Lara ahead of Sachin as he felt the West Indian helped his team win more matches.

On Tendulkar's retirement, Waugh said all good players ultimately have to hang their boots.

Despite the retirements of legends like Rahul Dravid and VVS Laxman, Waugh said Indian cricket will survive as it has abundance of young talents.

On Mahendra Singh Dhoni's captaincy, Waugh said he has a magical touch and hardly commits mistakes.

"During Australia's tour of India last year, Dhoni came in and scored a double century when India's chips were down. He knows how to perform at the big stage. He has got so much of magical touch," Waugh said.

"It is not easy to captain India where fans expect a lot from the players," he said.

'At the moment Australia is struggling a bit'

Image: Australian team
Photographs: Mike Hewitt/Getty Images

On Australia's chances here in October, Waugh said India is a fantastic team.

"India has always been a favourites at home. At the moment we are struggling a little bit," he said.

About Australia's opposition to DRS for many decisions going against them in the ongoing Ashes series, Waugh said the system is pretty good.

"We are getting more decisions right than wrong and I think it is a positive development," he said.