I think Ponting hasn't been tested as much against good bowling like the other 2 and is one of the reason i don't regard him to be good as them. He has cashed in on this era of flat pitches and some ordinary bowling. Its not much of suprise that we have many great batsman going around. Last time i checked we had Ponting, Kallis, Dravid, Yousuf, Sehwag, Sangakarra, Hayden, Inzi and maybe Jayawardne and Gilchrist until 2005.
There were so many batsman who were averg around 50 or above.
Aussie lineup really came up against a good bowling lineup in 2005 Ashes and they really struggled. Ponting avg around 35. He played one good knock but struggled throughout the series but it wasn't much of suprise that he was back in top form once he left the english shores.
If Ponting does go on to improve his record in India and continue in same vain of form for another 2 or 3 years than i'd certainly consider him to be good as Tendulkar or Lara or even better than them. But until that time i don't think he's good enough to be regarded good as the other 2.
But you see, everything you just said is counter-able with simple and easy logic.
Ponting faced the same attacks as Tendulkar did in the 90s, and in the 90s, there were 4 great bowling sides. Ponting was successful against 2/3 sides he could have faced - of course, he could not face his own. Whereas Tendulkar was successful against 2/4 he could have faced. So by and large, against quality bowling they had similar success, I'd actually say Ponting was better overall against the better bowling because his Windies record is not as poor as Tendulkar's record against Pakistan or South Africa.
Now that was in the 90s, in the 2000s, Ponting has outscored everybody. And the difference between him and Kallis and Yousuf and the regular suspects is that they have played Bangladesh and Zimbabwe many times, thus inflating their average. The
only one who averages 60+ (actually 63, without the minnows) is Ponting. Tendulkar himself only averages 46 discounting Bang/Zim. Dravid only averages 51 if you take out Bang/Zim. Ponting is 4-17 runs on average better than all the above batsman.
90s had their fair share of guys who averaged 50: Gower, Gooch, Waugh, Tendulkar, Lara, so although 2000s have a change in people from how many people average 50, it's a difference in average essentially. If we say flatter pitches have aided 1-3 points on average to a batsman's record, a lot of batsmen today lose those 50s and a lot in the 90s gain a better record. That's essentially the difference. I mean, Javad Miandad averaged 54 in the 80s, and the 80s had less batsmen averaging 50 than the 90s, so Miandad > Tendulkar?...You just can't use that logic so simply. Also, a team like Sri Lanka now actually has some geniunely great batsmen in Sangakkarra and Jayawardene. In this instance, it means that the standard of batting in the Sri Lankan side has risen, not that world bowling conditions are poor.
Now, with your third point regarding Ponting needing to do better in India against India to rank better, I have to ask you: do you ask Tendulkar to improve his record against S.Africa for him to rank better? Because Ponting's only flaw is India in India. He has no flaw in terms of overall record against
anybody. Tendulkar does poor in S.Africa and barely makes the cut in other places. Why is one small facet of Ponting's record weigh so much heavily than a few facets of Tendulkar's? Especially considering the legend of Tendulkar started in the 90s, where his record has more holes than Ponting does now. I mean, if Ponting does fix his record in India, then he is the most perfect batsman bar Bradman. It would mean he has scored everywhere and against everyone, especially worth scoring runs off as a test of his batsmanship. Tendulkar currently, himself, does not have that type of record and the closest he got to it was in the 90s but to ask Ponting to do even more just to be considered equal...sorry my friend but suffice to say I was waiting to hear something that would intrigue and challenge me but I got the same chinese whispers game.
This is why I asked for
your criteria, because the other arguments just don't sit right with logic, and at the very best are debatable. These batsmen debuted close enough apart and their careers have overlapped more than enough to give a fair view. Until I hear an argument that makes half-sense, I am still going to be in disbelief that at the least these two aren't comparable. Say Tendulkar is better, but let's not propagate the non-sense that Ponting is not even close.