Yeah he still showed glimpses of the old punter but he kept finding ways to get out. I remember a particularly frustrating series in India where he just butchered a number of starts.He always looked like he was going to come back and hit a big run of form but never really averaged more than low 40s for any of the years after 06/07. It was seriously frustrating watching his average free fall from high 50s to under 52 when he retired.
He had a gigantic run of form between about 00 to 07 where you were always surprised when he didn't hit a ton and averaged around 75 in those years. His poor start and the long tail of his career will forever statistically mask just how monstrous he was in his glory days.
Swann - managed to keep his bowling average under 30!Regarding the "unselfish" comment - are there any obvious examples of players who've retired to protect their averages, despite still being worth a place in the team?
Yeah, clearly struggling.The thing about Ponting though, was that he flourished big time when it seemed like all the great bowlers had retired. The only established great around was probably Murali, and Ponting struggled vs him. I know he averaged in the 20s when Steyn played too. I suppose he did well vs Flintoff/Anderson.
weird post all-roundThe thing about Ponting though, was that he flourished big time when it seemed like all the great bowlers had retired. The only established great around was probably Murali, and Ponting struggled vs him. I know he averaged in the 20s when Steyn played too. I suppose he did well vs Flintoff/Anderson.
The guy is such a championPonting in Mark Howard's podcast was interesting, talked about how he knew he'd probably reached his peak in 2006 at his 100th Test, that things on a personal note wouldn't get much better.
Not to mention inaccurate. Ponting did perfectly fine when facing Steyn. His 100 and 99 vs SA in 2008 came in the same match Steyn took 10 to win the series...great knocks. No way he averages 20s vs him.weird post all-round