ICC Cricket World Cup 2011 / Features
A winner as batsman and captain
Over an international career spanning 17 years, Ricky Ponting stamped his authority as one of Australia's greatest by scoring runs in almost all conditions and against all opposition
November 30, 2012
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Players/Officials:
Ricky Ponting
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Australia
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Quite simply, Ricky Ponting is the most successful cricketer to ever play the game: over a career spanning 559 international matches (going into his last Test), he was a part - and often the protagonist - of 377 victories. That the next best is only 301 (by Sachin Tendulkar) indicates, more than anything else, the golden era of Australian cricket that he was a part of, but he also shaped much of it with his batting and captaincy. Ponting remains the only player to have played in more than 100 Test wins (he has 108); among active cricketers, Jacques Kallis is next on 75. In ODIs, Australia won 262 of the 375 matches he played; next in line is again Tendulkar with 234. And then there were also the three World Cup wins that he was a part of, two of them as captain.
Through a large number of these wins, Ponting was Australia's mainstay in the batting line-up. In Australia, he is regarded as their best batsman since Don Bradman, and the numbers back up that claim quite emphatically. Only Tendulkar has more runs in Tests and ODIs, and till recently, he had the second-most centuries in both formats too, till Kallis went past him in Tests. Among Australians, Ponting's Test aggregate is easily the highest, though his average has fallen marginally below Greg Chappell's, thanks to his relatively poor recent form; in ODIs, Ponting scored almost 4000 runs more than the next-best Australian.
Perth may not be Australia's most historic ground, but in a way it'll be fitting that Ponting's Test journey will end where it all started 17 years ago: a rough lbw call stopped him four short of a debut century, against Sri Lanka, but since then not much has come in the way of his appetite for runs. Even when he took over as captain, it didn't diminish from Ponting the batsman: he averaged 51.51 in Tests and 42.91 in ODIs over a long captaincy stint.
Ponting's Test career started with 96 against Sri Lanka, and he then also passed 50 in his first Test against West Indies (88 in Brisbane), England (127 at Headingley), New Zealand (73 not out in Brisbane), South Africa (105 in Melbourne) and Pakistan (76 not out in Peshawar). (He also scored 54 in the only Test against ICC World XI in Sydney, making it seven 50-plus scores in his first Test against an opposition.) Despite those strong starts, though, Ponting's Test form was patchy through his first three years.
From 1999 to 2006, though, he was on top of his game as a Test batsman. During this period, he scored more than 8000 runs at a 65-plus average, with 31 centuries in 87 Tests. No other batsman scored 7500 Test runs. From 2007 onwards he wasn't quite as prolific, but he still managed to average almost 41, though his conversion rate of fifties into hundreds dropped drastically.
| Period | Tests | Runs | Average | 100s/ 50s |
| Till Dec 1998 | 22 | 1209 | 36.63 | 2/ 7 |
| Jan 1999 to Dec 2006 | 87 | 8114 | 65.43 | 31/ 29 |
| Jan 2007 onwards | 58 | 4043 | 40.83 | 8/ 26 |
| Career | 167 | 13,366 | 52.21 | 41/ 62 |
The golden years
During that eight-year period between 1999 and 2006, Ponting averaged 50 or more against all opposition except Sri Lanka, against whom he averaged 47.09 in seven Tests. He was especially unstoppable at home, averaging 73.76 from 47 Tests. He wasn't quite as prolific overseas, but still averaged an outstanding 56.55 in 40 matches. The only blot during that period - as indeed over his entire career - was his record in India: in seven Test innings there, he scored 40 runs at 5.71; over his entire career, he averaged 26.48 in Tests in India, with one century in 25 innings. Harbhajan Singh was his tormentor on most of those occasions, getting him out ten times, the most occasions any bowler dismissed him. He averaged more than 40 in all other countries in which he played more than one Test.
| Batsman | Tests | Runs | Average | 100s/ 50s |
| Ricky Ponting | 87 | 8114 | 65.43 | 31/ 29 |
| Jacques Kallis | 81 | 7053 | 62.41 | 22/ 35 |
| Rahul Dravid | 82 | 7265 | 59.54 | 21/ 31 |
| Mohammad Yousuf | 66 | 5954 | 58.37 | 22/ 22 |
| Inzamam-ul-Haq | 65 | 5455 | 56.23 | 19/ 24 |
| Matthew Hayden | 81 | 7422 | 55.80 | 26/ 27 |
| Sachin Tendulkar | 71 | 5837 | 55.06 | 18/ 23 |
| Brian Lara | 74 | 7212 | 54.63 | 24/ 23 |
| Steve Waugh | 58 | 3818 | 52.30 | 15/ 11 |
| Gary Kirsten | 53 | 4197 | 51.18 | 14/ 17 |
One of the best at No. 3
Through most of the 17 years Ponting played international cricket, he owned the No. 3 spot. In all international cricket, he scored 22,869 runs from that position, which is easily the highest; the second-best is Sangakkara's 16,324. Ponting's 61 international hundreds at that position is 25 more than the next-best.
Breaking up those numbers format-wise, Ponting missed out on 10,000 Test runs at No. 3 by only 96, and though he currently has the most Test hundreds, Sangakkara is only three behind and will probably overhaul that mark pretty soon.
In ODIs, Ponting is easily the most prolific No. 3 batsman with 12,662 runs, almost 5000 more than the next-best (Kallis' 7759). His 29 ODI hundreds at No. 3 is more than twice that of any other batsman at that position (Kallis has 13).
| Batsman | Innings | Runs | Average | 100s/ 50s |
| Rahul Dravid | 219 | 10,524 | 52.88 | 28/ 50 |
| Ricky Ponting | 196 | 9904 | 56.27 | 32/ 43 |
| Kumar Sangakkara | 169 | 9222 | 59.11 | 29/ 37 |
| Don Bradman | 56 | 5078 | 103.63 | 20/ 10 |
| Hashim Amla | 95 | 4734 | 55.04 | 16/ 22 |
| Richie Richardson | 107 | 4711 | 47.11 | 14/ 21 |
| Rohan Kanhai | 90 | 4689 | 52.68 | 13/ 20 |
| David Boon | 111 | 4412 | 45.48 | 13/ 20 |
| Batsman | Innings | Runs | Average | Strike rate | 100s/ 50s |
| Ricky Ponting | 330 | 12,662 | 42.48 | 80.73 | 29/ 74 |
| Jacques Kallis | 196 | 7759 | 46.74 | 73.83 | 13/ 57 |
| Kumar Sangakkara | 176 | 6517 | 39.98 | 76.16 | 7/ 47 |
| Dean Jones | 131 | 5100 | 43.58 | 72.07 | 7/ 39 |
| Brian Lara | 106 | 4447 | 45.84 | 85.98 | 12/ 26 |
Almost 21% of the Tests that Ponting played were against England, and while he managed eight centuries in those matches, his overall average against them was eight runs lower than his career average. Some of his best runs, though, were scored against England's bowlers, perhaps none better than his effort at Old Trafford in 2005, when he kept a high-quality England attack at bay in scoring a match-saving 156.
| Batsman | Tests | Runs | Average | 100s/ 50s |
| Don Bradman | 37 | 5028 | 89.78 | 19/ 12 |
| Allan Border | 47 | 3548 | 56.31 | 8/ 21 |
| Steve Waugh | 46 | 3200 | 58.18 | 10/ 14 |
| Clem Hill | 41 | 2660 | 35.46 | 4/ 16 |
| Greg Chappell | 35 | 2619 | 45.94 | 9/ 12 |
| Mark Taylor | 33 | 2496 | 42.30 | 6/ 15 |
| Ricky Ponting | 35 | 2476 | 44.21 | 8/ 9 |
| Neil Harvey | 37 | 2416 | 38.34 | 6/ 12 |
Finishing with a flourish
In fact, Ponting brought out his best in the last innings of a Test more than once. In Fatullah in 2006, Ponting's unbeaten 118 saved Australia from the embarrassment of a Test defeat against Bangladesh, as they turned around a huge first-innings deficit and chased a fourth-innings target of 307. A couple of months earlier, he had celebrated his 100th Test with centuries in each innings, including 143 not out in a successful fourth-innings run-chase of 288. (That makes him the only batsman to score centuries in each innings of his 100th Test.) During that period, Ponting had scored three fourth-innings centuries in seven innings.
Overall, Ponting is one of five batsmen to score four centuries in the fourth innings of Tests; no batsman has scored more. His overall fourth-innings stats are fantastic too: 1454 runs at 51.92. Only four batsmen have scored more fourth-innings runs than he has.
As well as finishing matches, Ponting was outstanding at setting up games with dominant opening-day performances: in the first innings, he scored 5403 runs at 61.39, with 21 hundreds. No batsman has more first-innings centuries.
Leading by example
As mentioned earlier, Ponting won more international matches than any other player, and in a majority of those he was captain. Of the 377 wins he was a part of, he led the team in 220 of those games. The next-best is Graeme Smith's 154. Smith might catch up with Ponting's 48 wins in Tests (he is only four short), but it's unlikely any captain will catch up with Ponting's 165 ODI wins in a hurry.
With a 30-Test cut-off among Test captains, only Steve Waugh has a higher win percentage (wins as a percentage of Tests captained); in ODIs, with a 60-match cut-off, Ponting is second only to Clive Lloyd.
| Captain | Tests | Won | Lost | Win % | W/L ratio |
| Steve Waugh | 57 | 41 | 9 | 71.93 | 4.56 |
| Ricky Ponting | 77 | 48 | 16 | 62.34 | 3.00 |
| Mike Brearley | 31 | 18 | 4 | 58.06 | 4.50 |
| Viv Richards | 50 | 27 | 8 | 54.00 | 3.38 |
| Mark Taylor | 50 | 26 | 13 | 52.00 | 2.00 |
| Captain | Matches | Won | Lost | Win % | W/L ratio |
| Clive Lloyd | 84 | 64 | 18 | 76.19 | 3.56 |
| Ricky Ponting | 230 | 165 | 51 | 71.74 | 3.24 |
| Hansie Cronje | 138 | 99 | 35 | 71.74 | 2.83 |
| Viv Richards | 105 | 67 | 36 | 63.81 | 1.86 |
| Steve Waugh | 106 | 67 | 35 | 63.21 | 1.91 |
Through all the rigours of captaincy, Ponting continued to excel at his primary suit - scoring runs. Only Smith and Allan Border have scored more Test runs as captains, while Ponting is second to none in terms of ODI runs as captain.
World Cup exploits
And after all this there was the small matter of his World Cup stats. In keeping with his winning stats, he also won more World Cup matches than any other player - 38, four more than Glenn McGrath. He's also one of only two players - Glenn McGrath being the other - to play four World Cup finals.
He excelled as a batsman too in these tournaments - only Tendulkar has scored more World Cup runs. Tendulkar's overall World Cup aggregate is 535 more than Ponting's, but the gap narrows to 92 when runs scored against the Test-playing teams are considered. In the biggest match of them all - the World Cup final - he has produced his best, scoring an unbeaten 140 against India 2003, the second-highest score in a final.
| Batsman | Matches | Runs | Average | Strike rate | 100s/ 50s |
| Sachin Tendulkar | 36 | 1597 | 46.97 | 85.03 | 3/ 12 |
| Ricky Ponting | 36 | 1505 | 50.16 | 79.92 | 4/ 6 |
| Brian Lara | 29 | 1109 | 42.65 | 83.88 | 2/ 6 |
| Javed Miandad | 30 | 1083 | 43.32 | 68.02 | 1/ 8 |
| Sanath Jayasuriya | 32 | 1024 | 35.31 | 89.43 | 3/ 6 |
| Viv Richards | 23 | 1013 | 63.31 | 85.05 | 3/ 5 |
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Stats editor Every week the Numbers Game takes a look at the story behind the stats, with an original slant on facts and figures. The column is edited by S Rajesh, ESPNcricinfo's stats editor in Bangalore. He did an MBA in marketing, and then worked for a year in advertising, before deciding to chuck it in favour of a job which would combine the pleasures of watching cricket and writing about it. The intense office cricket matches were an added bonus.

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Kallis is the best player of his generation. Ponting and Tendulkar then after.
Posted by Zubeir09 on (December 2, 2012, 19:03 GMT)Well... Peoples who try to compare ' Punter ' with Sachin or Kallis simply dont understand the game of cricket deeply. They all are the great players of same generation. If Kallis hasn't got support like Dravid/Laxman or Hayden/Langer, then don't also forget that he was never under the pressure of captaining a No. 1 ranked team, which ' Punter ' did for most of his career. And when it comes to captaincy, every cricket lover Knows that Sachin denied the opportunity to captain Indian Team. This fact also can't be overseen that none of Sachin or Kallis did lift their respective teams to the great points like ' Punetr ' lifts his team in both formats of the game. Leading his side to so many dominant victories, No. 1 Title for so long period, 2 ODI WC Titles As a Captain, 4 ODI WC Final Appearance, 108 test wins, 262 ODI wins and maintaining his own great form in batting while doing so makes " PUNTER " Great Cricketer of All Times.....Hats Off!
Posted by BoratShah on (December 2, 2012, 4:22 GMT)Nice compilation of most of Ricky's achievements. He was also one of THE BEST fielders in the world. It is a sign of something lacking in Cricket Statistics that Ponting's fielding cannot be quantified well enough to be included in such a piece.
Posted by blackie on (December 1, 2012, 13:48 GMT)I'm a bit surprised and disappointed that the discussion has turned so negative. i'm a west Indian but i recognise Ponting as one of the greats. his record speaks volumes though his 'win ratio' must be attributed to the greatness of the team. To be fair to him though it must be recognised that he did win more than one match for Australia. That is one sign of a great player. I hated when he played against Windies simply because he was so good. Cricket will miss the Punter. One of the modern greats!!!
Posted byOn current form and considering who he plays with Clark may usurp Ricky's number two spot. If Clark was not playing in this series it may have been a no contest. He must have scored close to 40% of Ausies runs this series.
Posted byMmm 44.00 Against the England he faced for most of his career? Not very flattering. He hasn't been a top notch performer since 2006 according to these stats. only 40.o If that was at the beginning of his career he would not have played more than 20 matches for Australia. Especially considering the talent who did not get to play for Aus in this period. Like I always thought Ricky's game was lifted by those around him. When they left his real talent level was exposed. a different game coming out when Hayden and Langer had put up a 100 plus partnership. Kallis has played with this pressure. It is only now that he gets to walk in after Hash had put a dent in the bowlers confidence.
Posted by JimBobBirnie on (December 1, 2012, 3:22 GMT)And in between the 3 defeats he led Australia to the unforgettable whitewash in 2007. I still have nightmares about the Adelaide match.
Posted by JimBobBirnie on (December 1, 2012, 3:17 GMT)Ponting is an all time great. The author failed to mention that he also holds the record for most Ashes series lost as captain.
Posted by RogerC on (December 1, 2012, 0:23 GMT)If number of wins is an indicator of a player's greatness, then Justin Langer is a greater player than Vivian Richards. Ponting's higher number of wins are due to a great team and he benefited from it. After the great team dissipated, he became a less effective player. One should actually look at Ponting's performance after 2005 and compare those with Lara or Tendulkar's performance over their career.
Posted by Soso_killer on (November 30, 2012, 23:41 GMT)This shows how great Kallis has been, during 99-06 SA had an unstable middle order, yet Kallis managed to average 60+.
It was only after 06 that the likes of AB & Amla came of age. Kallis has since then upped his strike rate, and his 100 conversion rate has improved.
Kallis never had (Gangully, Dravid, Laxman etc) or (Hayden, Langer, Martyn etc), so he was never going to score quickly, he had to drop anchor and occupy the crease which is not easy, i am sure Ponting will agree. As he has struggled in that regard with an unstable batting line up.
I hope those who dont understand the game will now realise that Kallis is the best player of his generation.