Not really the thread for it, but he obviously had the problem with his head falling away to off early doors in his innings. Obviously once he was in and any bowler was daft enough to bowl at the stumps they were just feeding a strength, but his wasn't a textbook technique.
No Graeme Smith but no Michael Clark either.
Rather watch Punter than either tho, ftr.
Gideon Haigh summed him up in the 06-07 Ashes when he said once he got to 20 he set like a giant, immovable chunk of concrete. I think once he started to get out in the 30s and 40s a few years ago it was the first sign he was on the wane.
I'm really glad now I took Burgeinho to that Sydney test last summer when he made that ton. I think the young bloke learned more watching Ponting practice in the lead up to that game than any other single thing he's watched. The focus and the way the worked on his foot movement in the lead up to that game was incredible to watch. Just relentless focus.
And God-given gifts too.
We owe him more than many appreciate in this country, I think. When the great side he led became no more, still he soldiered on manfully. Setting high standards that some of his recent team mates simply couldn't emulate. I suspect that contributed to much of his sometimes all-too demonstrative frustration as captain in later years.
For mine, his match saving 150 in the third test of the 05 Ashes was his greatest innings. Here was a bloke, the most fluent if stroke players, grinding out a day five hundred against a rampant attack with his team on the ropes. To my mind he went from a very, very good player to a great in one day.
And that's without his fielding, of course. So many blinders, so many run outs. I recall his catch at silly point on the last day of the final test in India in 04. I think it's maybe the best close in catch I've seen. Anticipation, reflexes, technique all in one. And as he rose to celebrate, he did the Cantona-like pose: arms out stretched in a moment of the greatest understatement; as though a more demonstrative celebration would have detracted from the feat which proceeded it.
He could bludgeon, he could beguile, and he could just make your jaw drop with those crazy highs he had as a batsman; perhaps second only to Lara in terms of scaling batting heights on his day. The bowling just seemed all the same to him.
What a cricketer he has been.