"The idea is to globalise cricket...We are here to encourage youngsters as well as women cricketers who will be joining us in our practise sessions," Tendulkar told reporters here yesterday ahead of the first match in the 'Cricket All Stars' series to be played tomorrow in the famed Citi Field.
Tendulkar, joined by Australian spin legend Shane Warne and 28 other players, said about 1000 young aspiring cricketers would be in the stands to watch the game and get a chance to witness and learn from their idols.
"We are here to guide you and encourage you. You need two hands to clap. Our hand is up and all the players are standing with us. It is for you all to step forward and make it happen," he said.
Tendulkar hopes that the series will build up momentum to have cricket re-introduced as an Olympic sport. The only time cricket was played as an Olympic sport was in 1900 between Britain and France at the Paris Summer Olympics. Later this month, the International Cricket Council will meet with the International Olympic Committee in Switzerland to discuss cricket's possible inclusion in the 2024 Games.
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Warne said that he is planning to have 15 games over the next three years and if the inaugural series goes well, he and the teams would like to come to the US every year and have at least three games every season.
"Americans love sports and cricket is one sport everyone is waiting to embrace. We are not here to compete against any sport. We are here to establish and popularise cricket in America," he said. He hoped that next time the cricketers visited the US, they would be able to see an American kid holding a baseball bat along with a cricket bat.