New Zealand batsman Rachin Ravindra on Thursday said hitting a match-winning century in the World Cup opener was inspired by watching footage of India cricket icons Sachin Tendulkar and Rahul Dravid after whom he is named.
With a first name made up of 'Ra' for Rahul and 'chin' from Sachin, due to his father's love of the game, Ravindra lived up to his name in spectacular style.
He smashed 123 in an unbeaten stand of 273 with Devon Conway as New Zealand cruised to a nine-wicket victory against defending champions England in Ahmedabad.
The 23-year-old Ravindra, whose parents moved from the south Indian city of Bengaluru to New Zealand, reached his ton soon after fellow left-hander Conway got his hundred in front of a sparse crowd at the 132,000-seater stadium.
He clubbed 11 fours and five sixes in his 96-ball innings and admitted he was inspired by Dravid and Tendulkar.
"I think those two are pretty special cricketers," he said.
"Obviously, I've heard a lot of stories and watched a lot of footage and I guess the influence from my parents and the old-school Indian cricketers was pretty cool.
"Being able to watch a lot of their highlights and stuff. Obviously, I idolised Sachin Tendulkar. I guess being a lefty, there's guys you look at, I love (Brian) Lara, I love (Kumar) Sangakkara, just the usual gun left-handers."
The Wellington-born Ravindra reached his ton off 82 balls with nine fours and four sixes as New Zealand reached their target of 283 with 13.4 overs to spare on Thursday.
"I think a hundred is always special, but I guess in terms of being able to perform in India is pretty cool. It's cool to have the Indian roots," Ravindra told reporters.
"It was also nice to have my parents there watching and they flew over from New Zealand. So, it's cool to have that moment and obviously it's always nice coming to India.
"I have a sense of family connection whenever I'm in Bangalore and being able to see my grandparents."
Ravindra has made an impression in just 13 ODI matches since his debut in March this year.