Fifteen years ago he fell five runs short,  but in 2011, with his team in big trouble, Rahul Dravid got his name on  the Lord's honours board
 
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 Outside the St John's Wood tube station this morning, touts were  generously offering the day's ticket for 500 pounds, at roughly ten  times the printed price, which was still 400 pounds less than what  Michael Holding had heard they were selling at. Black marketeers always  do brisk business around the Lord's Test, and tickets for all of India's  Tests have been sold out, but the reason for today's mark-up was  obvious: Sachin Tendulkar, chasing his hundredth hundred, was due to  bat. 
 The crowds had to settle for only a cameo from the great man, but those  who appreciate the true worth of Test cricket were treated to a batting  masterclass from a man who has batted more than anyone else in Test  cricket. Fifteen years after his debut at this ground, Rahul Dravid finally managed to erase the regret of falling short of a hundred by five runs,  and became the first current Indian top-order batsman to have his name  engraved on the "most talked-about honour board in world cricket." 
 Dravid, the most pragmatic and grounded of men, and a colossus of a  cricketer in his own right, has never been fussed about conducting his  career under Tendulkar's shadow. Rather than hankering after celebrity  status, an inevitability for an Indian cricketer of reasonable pedigree,  he has accepted it as a professional hazard. 
 As a new generation of brasher, flashier Indian cricketers has arrived  to ride the Twenty20 wave, Dravid's stock has dipped among the  marketeers, but he has had maturity and sense of humour to joke about  his lack of endorsement contracts. He couldn't, however, have been as  unconcerned about the relatively fallow run with the bat in recent years  that has steadily dragged his average down to the more humdrum side of  the fifties from a career high of nearly 58. 
 The runs hadn't dried up altogether but they had been coming laboriously  even by his own standards, and even though he had scored the  match-winning hundred on a tough pitch in Kingston last month, all his recent hundreds had come against lesser bowling attacks. 
 And his last tour to England had been his worst on these shores.  Burdened by the cares of captaincy, he spent many fruitless stretches at  the crease unable to move the scorecard, with a 96-ball 12 at The Oval  capping his tour of misery as a batsman even though he had the pleasure  of leading India to a first series win in England in 21 years. Speaking  at the end of the day he admitted to periods of self-doubt and the  awareness that he hadn't met his own exacting standards. 
 But with the match still in balance, and against what is arguably the  best bowling attack in English conditions, he delivered an innings  worthy of Dravid at his very best. It was an innings of skill and  authority, of classy drives and stout defence, of dead certain footwork  and sure judgment, and of unwavering application. 
 Apart from one chance he offered to the slips, he never looked in  trouble despite the ball jagging around all day, both in the air and off  the pitch. With advancing age, he has grown a bit more animated in  celebrating his hundreds, and today, by running his 100th run with his  bat aloft, and punching the air with vigour after it was completed, he  showed how much this hundred meant to him. Later he would rank it among  his most special innings in the last four or five years. 
 "To miss out in my first Test here was something that stayed with me a  little bit," he said, "It's not that if I hadn't got this hundred it  would be the end of the world. There are lots of grounds where I haven't  got a hundred. But it was there in the back of my mind and I probably  had one more go at it. For it to come in this situation feels really  good. There are some great names on that honours board. It's just nice  to be on it." 
 The most refreshing part of the innings was the way it began. His first  scoring shot was cover-driven off a full swinging ball from James  Anderson. It wasn't a half volley, and Dravid, already forward, waited  for the ball to pass his front pad to drive the ball with the open face  of the bat to the left of the cover fielder. Abhinav Mukund, who looks a  better player with each Test, outscored him with nifty clips off his  hips, and then Tendulkar glided on with a couple of sensational  back-foot drives, but Dravid was soon matching him in finding the  boundary, and, with three of them in one over against Anderson, he even  overtook him. 
 Much that is written about Dravid's classical orthodoxy is slightly  ill-founded. He has the temperament of a classical Test batsman, but his  technique is his own. He is wristy and dexterous, guides the ball  willingly and securely with an angled bat, plays the forward defence in  the most ornamental manner, and the cover drive with the hands well in  front of his pads. He is prone to move into prolonged periods of  self-denial, but here, with bowlers willing to pitch the ball up, he  played his most fluent and flowing innings in recent years. 
 To the very end, he remained focused on getting India past the follow-on  target. "It helped me that 274 was the number on my mind," he said.  Praveen Kumar came and swung a few, but there was never panic or haste  even after he had departed. Dravid's last 20 runs contained three serene  and crisp boundaries, and the on-drive off Chris Tremlett that took him  in to the nineties bore the stamp that is Dravid's very own. 
 He was asked if the last couple of hundreds have added a season of two  to his career. "That's the one thing I've learned from Sachin.  He  doesn't talk about the future, he just focusses on the present. He's  been a great motivation for me. I just want to focus on what we need to  do next in this game." 
 Dravid will allow himself to savour the day, but he would not allow it  to distract from the main challenge. There is a Test to be saved. The  good news for India is that their trench-war specialist has hit peak  form early. When Dravid scores a hundred, India rarely lose. In fact, it  has happened only once in 153 Tests. 
 "Hopefully, that's a happy omen." 

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