FaaipDeOiad
Hall of Fame Member
Well yeah, he always looks bad early in his innings. He falls across the line of off stump and looks vulnerable to anything full and on the stumps, particularly moving back into him, and he plays at deliveries outside off stump and edges them when he'd either leave them or hit them for four under normal circumstances. And that's not even getting into his problems playing spin with hard hands early in his innings.Mr Mxyzptlk said:Early in his innings Ponting shuffles across his stumps and therefore plays at balls he doesn't need to. And in the Ashes and the CT he has certainly been tested out in that area. He may not always have been dismissed by it, but he certainly has looked very vulnerable against it.
You don't have to be dismissed to be tested out.
These things have been known about for years, and are pretty much the most talked about weaknesses in world cricket. I'd say they get tested out every single match. Every pace bowler throws up a few outside off for him early on, and tries to get him LBW as well, and many captains bring on a spinner when Ponting is relatively new at the crease when they can. I really don't see how these things are limited to the Ashes or CT at all, they just happen to be two series in which he didn't do especially well. In fact, I can't think of anything that was done in the CT that wasn't done last summer by South Africa, though I suppose Jerome Taylor is a little bit quicker than Ntini or Nel and might have a better chance of trapping him in front. He played and missed outside off a hell of a lot against South Africa early in his innings too, and even got put down a few times, but he also made five centuries in six tests.
I don't really agree with the suggestion that his weaknesses "haven't been tested" either, I'm just struggling to work out what is special about those two series you mentioned other than that Ponting didn't make many runs.