Mate maybe reading more carefully might improve your understanding. You clearly didn't take in anything of what i posted
like the fact that i disagree with kyears original statement so its doubtful you even read it based on the slant of your posting.
Ricky Ponting was a run making machine, but he was by no means a complete batsmen the way Tendulkar, Bradman or Hobbs were, he never mastered every facet of the game he was tested against. Again you miss the point regarding contemporaries. Sobers was the greatest batsmen of his generation, against the bowlers he came up against on the pitches he had to bat on, he was better than everyone else, while the same is not true for Ponting. At the end of the day you can never compare across generations with any degree of precision, you can only rate a batsmen on the degree to which they dominated in their era. But we can assume that the quality of bowlers has stayed relatively the same throughout this period of time, and that pitches as a rule were friendlier to bowlers in Sobers day compared to Pontings.
But this isn't even the point i was trying to make, the fact of the matter is that each and every one of us rates players based on a wide range of reasons, and of course we argue about the logic behind these reasons, but the amount of emphasise we place on each of these factors determines how we holistically rate players. Lets just say for arguments sake that i can find 3 reasons why i would hold kyear's statement true and 7 why i would not (of course this happens with a lot less structured thinking). So i would disagree, but i could understand how Kyear could reach a different conclusion if for say he held a couple of factors as much more important than the others. At the end of the day this is all opinion about players who most of us have only ever read about (if that). Now this has been much more analytical that i intended in order to get the point across, but it is pure hubris to label someone illogical, when your opinions are of course highly subjective and therefore illogical.
Something else i want to bring up is that i think the Don is highly over rated by nigh on everyone, hes a clear greatest ever batsmen, but imo he's not heads and shoulders above the rest like its commonly made out. His mental game and desire for runs of course surpasses everyone, but his failures on sticky wickets compared to his contemporaries, flat wickets, lbw laws and biased umpires meaning it was nigh on impossible to get him out lbw, (Similarly to what Pakistani umpires were notorious for, but tbf NZ umpires were fairly decent at it as well) are often over looked in discussion. Imo his average translates into somewhere in low-mid seventies if he were to have played in the Tendulkar era.