Well this seems as good a thread as any to join back into after a long absence… (Hi again to all, by the way)
First, my answer – Ponting, barring something wildly unforeseen, will end up overtaking SRT and everyone else by the end of his career to hold the world record for most Test runs and centuries.
Secondly – no, I don’t necessarily think that automatically makes Ponting greater than Tendulkar (the reasons for that have been more than covered in the rest of this thread)…
BUT I don’t think the idea is as laughable as many on here would think, and I firmly believe the idea will become even more credible as Ponting’s career progresses. Punter’s performances over the past 5-6 years or so have been little short of astonishing – even in today’s age of roads for pitches and a relative lack of truly great bowlers (and the fact that two of them played for his team anyway), he has still statistically outshone his contemporaries. More than that, he has done it not by slowly grinding out big scores to boost his average while his team’s chances have been evaporating, but by playing attacking cricket, being prepared to take a chance, by dominating bowling attacks and by, most of the time, amassing runs as quickly as possible to win matches for his team. That he has played in that style is admirable enough, that he has had the ability to play in that style while still piling up the runs at a rate matched by few men in the long history of the game, is quite remarkable.
Yes, there are criticisms by which we can mark him down. He has yet to have a dominant series in India, and while I don’t necessarily consider this the be-all and end-all that some on these pages do, I have no doubt it is a wrong he is looking to right.
Yes, he has not had to face his own attack, which has been by far the best and most potent bowling line up of this era. But Viv Richards didn’t have to face his WI pace battery either, and he still didn’t end up with better figures than his contemporaries – Chappell, Gavaskar, Border and Miandad can all be said to have better numbers. Ponting, when blessed with the same advantage, has at least had the common decency to statistically outperform his contemporaries.
Yes, Ponting has “cashed in” in an era where bat has completely dominated ball, where conditions, pitches, bowling quality have all come together to send batting averages skyrocketing. But then so has everyone else, and none so well as him – despite Australia playing less Tests against Zimbabwe and Bangladesh than most if not all other countries. The 1920s and 1930s were also an era where bat utterly dominated ball (even with the uncovered pitches back then) and when batting averages skyrocketed. Wally Hammond actually “ended” his Test career with a batting average of 54, which was then raised beyond 58 after his retirement with the recognition of the Eng v NZ series of 1932/33 as official Tests – a series in which Hammond “cashed in” against minnows to the tune of 563 runs in two innings and once out! Scoring runs against weak opposition in a batsman-friendly era is not necessarily a new phenomenon.
Bear in mind I am playing devil’s advocate here – let me state unequivocally that I consider WR Hammond and Sir Vivian Richards to be out-and-out, bona fide, unadulterated cricketing immortals, and I place them both higher in the Pantheon as it currently stands than Ricky Ponting. I simply wish to mention that while we can (and some on here seem only too eager to) find criteria by which to mark down Ponting’s (and other modern players) achievements, we should remember to try to apply those criteria consistently, and that the same criticisms can also be attached to other players who most or all of us agree rank indisputably among the truly great.
Whether Ponting eventually takes his place at the top table alongside Richards, Hammond, Tendulkar, Lara, Sobers, Hobbs et al (Bradman has a special table to himself) is still to be seen, and I believe we will gain a much clearer picture when his career has run its course and we can assess it as a whole against the backdrop of history. But irrespective of exactly where his story finishes and which ranking tier he attains, the fact is that he scores mountains of runs, at a rate matched or exceeded by few in the history of the game, he scores them with dashing strokeplay and audacity, he has the capacity to tear a bowling attack to pieces and turn a match on its head, he scores them (with one or two exceptions) against all opposition and under all conditions, and he often scores them when they matter and are needed most. Put that all together and you have a great, great batsman, which is what I firmly believe Ricky Ponting to be.
It’s good to be back…