Peter Roebuck writes in the
Sydney Morning Herald that Ricky Ponting must rethink his approach to captaincy or Australia will lose to South Africa and England in the next nine months.
Ponting confronted and corrected his wild ways, to his credit. He did not blame anyone except himself. From that moment, his rise was inevitable. Honesty and ambition command respect. In controlling his furies, he lost part of himself, a part he needs to recover or else his captaincy is doomed. Most particularly, he needs to restore his feel for the game, and put it alongside his sportsmanship.
Above all, he needs to lead his men away from the resentments of the Sydney Test, which was a disaster for Australian cricket. Ponting and his senior players pursued a case they could not win over an incident they had initiated thereby turning a sharp-tongued opponent into a national hero. An aspiring leader was described as " an unreliable witness".
Ricky Ponting’s players fought hard, but did not have the bowling resources required to trouble a strong batting order appreciating placid pitches [in India]. The imminent return of Andrew Symonds will put a bit of spark into the fielding and add aggression to the batting, but it will not add much penetration with the ball, writes Roebuck in the
Witness.
Also in the
Witness Ray White writes, "All that can be read into the Australians’ defeat by India is that they are still not easy to beat ... All that has happened is that the Australians have come back to the chasing pack that includes just three teams — India, clearly, England and South Africa."