Ricky Ponting
The Wisden Forty, including the Leading Cricketer in the World, have been selected by Wisden as the world's top players on the basis of their class and form shown in all cricket during the calendar year 2003
Gideon Haigh
15-Apr-2004
The Wisden Forty, including the Leading Cricketer in the World, have been
selected by Wisden as the world's top players on the basis of their class
and form shown in all cricket during the calendar year 2003. The selections
were made in consultation with many of the game's most experienced writers
and commentators. In the end, though, they were Wisden's choices, guided
by the statistics but not governed by them. The selection panel are no more
infallible than any other selectors.
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Ponting's calendar year featured 11 hundreds, five among 1,154 one-day
runs at 46.16, and six in 1,503 Test runs at 100.20, including three that
became doubles. Yet as impressive as his run-pile's height was the energy
with which it was scaled. Ponting hits his attacking shots hard, his defensive
strokes barely less hard, and runs every run as though it might be his last.
Even at his most restrained and responsible, he impresses one as barely
contained, brimful of confidence, ready any moment to bust loose.
For almost its entirety, the same has been thought of Ponting's career; it
has been hampered not by doubts of his ability but by certainties. Born in
Tasmania's Prospect, he quickly became it. His grandmother dressed fouryear-
old Ricky in a T-shirt bearing the legend: "Inside this shirt is an
Australian Test cricketer". He had his first equipment deal with Kookaburra
at the age of 12, represented his state at 17 and his country at 20; his maiden
Test hundred at Headingley in July 1997, when he was 22, suggested not
so much a coming man as an arriving and disembarking one.
For the next four years, however, Ponting's career was of the coming-and-going
kind. There was more coming than going, as a Test average a tick
over 40 from his first 45 Tests suggests, but questions remained about his
staying power, except when it was devoted to staying out late: commotions
in nightclubs in Calcutta and Sydney tarnished his reputation. Thirty
subsequent Tests in which he has averaged 79.73 have answered every
interrogatory, plus a few not even asked. His restless cricket intelligence
forced him to the forefront of candidates to succeed Steve Waugh as Australian captain; his marriage to Rianna Cantor, an arts/law graduate from
University of Wollongong, provided domestic serenity.
Few issues in Australian cricket have caused such public discontent as the
cultivation of separate Test and one-day teams. When Waugh's limited-overs
mandate was rescinded, one Sydney newspaper ran mug shots of the
country's selectors beneath the headline "Wanted: For Incompetence". Some,
doubtless, wished their prejudices justified when Ponting was appointed
Waugh's one-day successor in February 2002; he did not oblige them. The
worst mishap when Australia began their World Cup defence in February
2003 befell them before they took the field, and Ponting so skilfully contained
the morale damage from the Shane Warne drug drama that Warne was barely
missed. And, with 114 in the first Super Six game against Sri Lanka and
140 not out in the final against India, Ponting was himself Australia's highest
scorer of the tournament.
As if to make his own statement about the relationship between the game's
two forms, Ponting promptly set about bringing to Test cricket some of his
one-day vim. Three Tests against West Indies yielded 523 at 130.75. Series
against Bangladesh and Zimbabwe then warmed him up for a rematch with
India, who had had Australia's and his measure just under three years earlier:
while again more than matching Australia, India had this time to go round Ponting rather than through him. He sold his wicket not just dearly but, with
242 in Adelaide and 257 in Melbourne, downright exorbitantly.
While Ponting's appointment as Waugh's Test successor was welcomed
for restoring the five and one-day leaderships to a single custodian, it
reasserted some other old Australian cricket values too: that a team's most
complete batsman should bat at No. 3 and that the captain is chosen from
a nation's best 11 cricketers. Departures from both customs have been
countenanced in recent years - not without sound reason - but Ponting seems
to fit as snugly into the traditions of his office as any of his antecedents.
And, as for "the grind", Ponting seems quite content for it to continue -
preferably with Australia doing most of the grinding.