Ikki: I dont contribute at all in this forum, but am a lurker and keep following threads which interest me. This is one such.
i) Thumbs up to you and uppercut for breaking the myth of Gary Sobers.
ii) Ponting vs Dravid is an issue dear to my heart so I had to comment. I think it'd be hard to come up with a stat which would convince you (or any Ponting fan) that Dravid is at least the equal of Ponting, but I think analyzing the strengths and weaknesses of Dravid and Ponting would help.
Dravid is an amazing player of fast bowling especially on the backfoot (and he judges the length of the delivery better than almost anyone and you would rarely see him getting out to a bouncer or a ball keeping low. Even during his bad run, he still has possessed this capability ).
He doesnt shuffle across that much especially when he is playing on a seaming pitch but over the last 5 years he seems to have lost this ability. He was a also a great leaver of the ball but somehow all the years of ODI cricket have made him defend the ball more rather than leave them.
The biggest strength of Dravid has always been to shine in matches where run scoring was almost an impossibility. (A friend had mined some stats long back and Dravid almost contributed 18-19% of team runs when India scored < 200 in a test innings. Even the great SRT and the ever dependable VVS managed to score only 12-13% in such scenarios). Some examples of this are the Durban test of 96, the entire NZ series of 2002, one of the WI tests in 2006. This has also been true in ODIs played on seaming wickets such as the Toronto series, 1996 SA tour, 1999 WC, etc. He has a terrific 4th innings record (which is obviously going down hill now).
The biggest weakness of Dravid is his play against spin bowling especially when he cant read the spin from the hand. This has been exposed by Warne (with his flippers and drift), Murali and Saqlain (by their doosras), Paul Adarms and Mendis (by his carrom ball). Also, when struggling with form or confidence he is a bad judger of length of off spin bowling and you would be surprised to know that Pat Symcox and Symonds have got him out more times than the greats Alan Donald, Ambrose and Akram.
Just going by Dravid's play against fast bowling I'd put him on par with Lara and Sachin, and probably ahead of Steve Waugh. But the way he struggles against spin sometimes he is definitely a rung below both Lara and Sachin.
Ponting, on the other hand, seems to be a player who can get exposed against fast bowling because of his habit of almost jumping on the front foot. Bowlers who can move the ball away with reasonable bounce have almost always troubled him. Of course he has easily got more shots than Dravid (and that pull shot is a delight to watch) but in tough conditions what really matters is technique and I wouldn't hesitate to put him a rung below Dravid in such conditions.
Ponting is probably a better player of spin bowling than Dravid but that's not due to his technique (which is flawed just like Dravid) but more the fact that he reads better from the hands (especially off Murali) and is also not afraid to step down the track.
Based on their techniques I'd put Dravid ahead of Ponting. Based on their career achievements (of course excluding the last two years of Dravid's career) I'd put them on par.