MUMBAI: Pranav Dhanawade, a 15-year-old opening batsman, who scored 1009 not out in a tournament recognized by the Mumbai Cricket Association shows a thumbs up gesture as he poses near the score board in Mumbai, India, yesterday. The Mumbai teenager has become the first batsman to score 1000 runs in an officially recognized innings. — AP MUMBAI: Pranav Dhanawade, a 15-year-old opening batsman, who scored 1009 not out in a tournament recognized by the Mumbai Cricket Association shows a thumbs up gesture as he poses near the score board in Mumbai, India, yesterday. The Mumbai teenager has become the first batsman to score 1000 runs in an officially recognized innings. — AP

MUMBAI: A Mumbai schoolboy made history yesterday when he became the first batsman in any class of cricket to score 1,000 runs in a single innings, with Indian legend Sachin Tendulkar leading the plaudits.

Fifteen-year-old Pranav Dhanawade smashed his way to 1,009 not out off 323 balls as he obliterated a 117-year-old record for the highest number of runs scored in one innings.

Dhanawade, the son of an auto-rickshaw driver, soared past Arthur Collins' previous record total of 628 in England in 1899, during an inter-school tournament in the western Indian city.

"Congrats #PranavDhanawade on being the first ever to score 1,000 runs in an innings. Well done and work hard. You need to scale new peaks!" Indian batting great Tendulkar posted on Twitter.

Dhanawade's epic knock included 129 fours and 59 sixes and came at a phenomenal strike rate of 312.38. It ended when his KC Gandhi High School team declared on 1,465 at the ground at Thane in northern Mumbai.

Their opponents, Arya Gurukul, had been bowled out earlier for just 31, according to the Press Trust of India. Dhanawade's innings lasted 395 minutes and occurred during the Bhandari Cup school tournament, which is officially recognised by the Mumbai Cricket Association.

The teenager, who also plays as wicket-keeper, surpassed Collins' score on Monday, finishing the day on 652, before crossing the 1,000 mark after lunch yesterday.

"I have always been a big-hitter. When I started I never thought about breaking the record," Dhanawade told the Hindustan Times after his opening-day knock.

"The focus was never that. I just played my natural game, which is to attack from the word go.

"After reaching 300, my coach Harish Sharma told me to play on. I did not know of the world record, but we had the Indian record in mind," he added, referring to the previous highest national individual total of 546.

'ANOTHER TENDULKAR?'

Dhanawade's monumental achievement sent Twitter into a frenzy. His name trended in India, with excited but also nervous cricket fans posting regular score updates as he neared the 1,000 mark.

Ayaz Memon, a cricket expert, said it would be a phenomenal feat for a cricketer to score four digits at any level of the game.

"It's just incredible. Scoring 1,000 runs in less than two days at this speed is a great achievement," Memon told AFP.

But translating this accomplishment from club to international level will be a big challenge for the teenager, he said.

The omens are good, however-Tendulkar, Dhanawade's batting hero, first burst onto the scene in 1988 aged 14 when he scored 326 not out in a Mumbai school match.

He went on to become the highest scorer in the history of Test cricket as well as the first player to score 100 international centuries.

"...(The) numbers are just unbelievable. Another @sachin_rt in the making?" tweeted Indian international spin bowler Harbhajan Singh yesterday .

Collins, who himself was born in India, was aged just 13 when he entered the record books for his score at Clifton College in Bristol, where a plaque honours his exploits. - AFP