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Home  » Cricket » We play Tests so quickly that I could break Tendulkar's record: Cook

We play Tests so quickly that I could break Tendulkar's record: Cook

October 19, 2016 22:23 IST
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Given that Cook is still only 31, remains at the top of his game and is remarkably injury-free, talk is growing that Indian legend Sachin Tendulkar's all-time record of 200 Test appearances could be vulnerable.

IMAGE: England captain Alastair Cook. Photograph: Getty Images.

England skipper Alastair Cook, who will make his 134th Test appearance in Chittagong against Bangladesh on Thursday, would reach yet another landmark in his illustrious career which has been continuously rewriting the record books.

Four years ago, Cook captured the record for the most number of Test centuries by an England batsman. Later this year, he became the first Englishman to score 10,000 runs in the longest format of the game and now, he is set to overtake Alec Stewart as his country's most capped Test cricketer.

After travelling 16,000 miles on a round-trip home to attend the birth of his second child, the left-hander is all set to lead the team in the first of seven successive Tests on the sub-continent between now and Christmas.

After the two-match Test series against minnows Bangladesh, England would face India, the current number 1 ranked Test side, for a five-match series starting from November 9.

Having scored 10599 runs and 29 Test centuries, the most impressive part about Cook's illustrious career is the fact he has managed to play 131 of his 133 Tests to date consecutively.

Given that he is still only 31, remains at the top of his game and is remarkably injury-free, talk is growing that Indian legend Sachin Tendulkar's all-time record of 200 Test appearances could be vulnerable.

"We play Tests so quickly nowadays so I could do (break Tendulkar's appearances record)... The danger is looking at it," he told journalists late Tuesday in Chittagong.

"Seventy-odd Test matches now seems a long way away and if I am brutally honest the more times you pack your bags to leave your family at home you do question how long you can keep doing it for."

"It doesn't matter whether you are playing your first game or your 134th, it is a very proud moment to play for England and you should never ever forget that and I certainly don't, "he added.

IMAGE: England captain Alastair Cook bats during day three of the second Investec Ashes Test against Australia at Lord's. Photograph: Gareth Copley/Getty Images.

The England skipper, however, admitted that leaving so abruptly after the birth of his daughter on Sunday and arriving back in Bangladesh on Monday afternoon, has been hard and may hamper his preparations for the opening Test starting from Thursday.

"It's been quite an emotional 48 hours. As you can imagine, having another daughter and then leaving so soon afterwards doesn't make you feel like the best husband or father in the world," he said.

"It's great that mum and baby are doing very well and so it's very special but I'm out here now so I've got to go and play some cricket. I think mentally and emotionally it will be a big challenge but there's every motivation.

"It won't be hard when you get out there because you know what you've left behind - it's not going to guarantee you any runs but you can throw yourself straight in there and do the best you can because there is no point moping around," he added.

The first Test between the two sides will begin on Thursday while the second and the final Test would be played at the Shere Bangla National Stadium from October 28.

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