Ponting determined to break Champions Trophy jinx
Ricky Ponting can't zero in on why Australia has failed to capture the mini World Cup, but he insists his side is suitably prepared to tackle this one
Siddhartha Vaidyanathan in New Delhi
08-Oct-2006
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For Ivan Lendl, it was Wimbledon; for Boris Becker and Pete Sampras it was
the red clay at the French Open; for the current Australian side it's been
the Champions Trophy. Ricky Ponting can't zero in on why Australia has
failed to capture the mini World Cup, but he insists his side is suitably prepared to tackle this one.
Just like Andrew Flintoff yesterday, Ponting summed up the value of this
event by saying thoughts of the Ashes had, for a while at least, been
put on the backburner. "It's a very important tournament for us, the
second biggest that we play as an ODI team," he said in Delhi. "It's something that's
eluded us in the recent years - we've made it to the semi-finals in the
last two Champions Trophies - and we're hoping for more this time. We've
come here pretty well prepared and there's still time before it starts.
We've got a good record in India while playing one-day cricket over the
years, hopefully that will come through early on."
In the 12 games they've played in India since the start of the decade,
Australia have won nine and lost only three. The last of those games was
the final
of the TVS Cup in Kolkata, when a second-string Australian side
triumphed by 37 runs. This time Ponting will be looking to put out his "best side" from the word go. "We have
14 players here and you'd think that when the first game comes around,
we'll have our best XI and maintain that team throughout, injuries
permitting."
Question marks hang over Glenn McGrath's fitness and he is someone who
Ponting would dare not risk ahead of the Ashes campaign.
"Glenn came back really well in Malaysia," Ponting said. "He was never going to come back and be at his absolute best
straight away, but I thought he improved game by game in Kuala Lumpur. In the final game he bowled six overs
for six runs. Then he went back and played club cricket and got about
26-28 overs under his belt. We're going to monitor his progress through
the course of the Champions Trophy, with an eye on the Ashes, and keep him
as ready as possible for that."
Australia kick off their campaign on October 18 against one of the
qualifiers, but their next two games are the big ones. On October 21 -
which also happens to be the festive day of Diwali - they take on
England at Jaipur before locking horns with India a week later at
Mohali.
Ponting said the England game was a chance to make the early
running ahead of the Ashes. "There's
still a while before the first Test [at Brisbane on November 23] but
certainly it will be our first chance to play them before the Ashes," he said. "We'd
like to think we can provide some sort of statement in that game."
The early part of that early message will need to come from the opening batsmen.
As the latest Numbers
Game column points out, Australia have tried 12 opening pairs
since the start of 2005, a figure that places them behind only West Indies
and India in the juggling stakes.
"We had a look at [Shane] Watson in Kuala
Lumpur," Ponting said. "He was pretty
impressive there. [Simon] Katich has done well for close to 18 months or so since
he's had the opportunity to open. It's not an area of concern for us. We
looked at a few things in Kuala Lumpur and thought of a better way of doing it, and
hopefully we can get it right during the practice matches here."
Siddhartha Vaidyanathan is staff writer of Cricinfo