Ricky Ponting future uncertain reveals Australia coach Mickey Arthur
Latest in Cricket
140 Sport blogs
Via the World: Welcome to the ocean
The sun is setting on my fifteenth day at sea. Pale pinks and oranges paint the western sky and gent...
iBet: Serena Williams looks hungry again
Serena Williams has looked right back to her best in recent weeks and more importantly she looks hun...
Manchester City top the ‘injury league’, with Manchester United bottom
The results of new research into every significant injury suffered by every Premier League footballe...
Related articles
Ricky Ponting's international future could be in doubt if he fails to make runs, regardless of the former captain's standing in the game, Australia coach Mickey Arthur has said.
Australia play the first of a four-test series against India in Melbourne on December 26 and the debate over the out-of-form batsman's place has polarised the nation.
Many former players and pundits have demanded the 37-year-old step down or be pensioned off, while others have cited Ponting's imperious record as reason enough to allow him to decide the manner of his own exit.
South African Arthur said Ponting, the game's most successful captain and third most prolific run scorer in tests, could not rest on his reputation or his value as a mentor to Australia's next generation.
"I don't think anyone's guaranteed a start," Arthur told reporters at the Melbourne Cricket Ground on Tuesday when asked if Ponting would be retained for the Boxing Day test.
"Ricky Ponting is really vital to where we want to take this team. We are really hoping that he finds his form and hopefully that form is just around the corner.
"I've backed Ricky Ponting in, like I've backed Mike Hussey in for a period of time because I think they're crucial to the development of the side.
"For our young batters, to bat with guys like that is fantastic, but, again, they need to keep giving us ammunition, they need to keep giving us performances.
"Nobody's guaranteed a start, nobody's got a privilege to play in the Australian cricket team. They've got to be producing the goods and giving us ammunition to play."
Arthur, a member of Australia's five-man selection panel along with captain Michael Clarke, will meet with the other selectors later on Tuesday to decide Ponting's immediate fate.
Ponting has scored two half-centuries in his past four innings but appeared badly out of touch as he scored a total of 21 runs in the second test loss against New Zealand in Hobart earlier this month.
The Tasmanian is nonetheless expected to be retained for the first India test given the simultaneous failures of most of his batting colleagues and injury clouds hanging over others.
Australia launched a three-day batting boot camp in Melbourne on Tuesday for Ponting, Clarke, Hussey, all rounders Shane Watson and Dan Christian, and wicketkeeper Brad Haddin, hoping to avoid another stunning collapse against India that cost certain victory in Hobart and brought defeat in Cape Town against South Africa last month.
Arthur said all batsmen had been given frank notes about where they had been deficient.
"I think we just want to see Ricky accessing the ball a little bit and part of this preparation the next couple of days is just to free him up," he added.
Watson, who was ruled out of the two-test New Zealand series, is expected to be fit to slot back into the batting lineup for the Boxing Day test but may not bowl as he recovers from a hamstring injury.
Batsman Shaun Marsh would struggle to play a part after being out of competitive cricket for six weeks with a back injury, Arthur said, potentially opening the door for the untried Ed Cowan in place of opener Phil Hughes, who is expected to be dropped.
Australia also appear set to retain the youth-led attack that bowled admirably in the test series against New Zealand, with 32-year-old paceman Ryan Harris no certainty to come into consideration.
Harris, who suffered a hip injury during the South Africa tour, will return to competitive cricket with a domestic Twenty20 fixture later on Tuesday.
"He's got to prove to us that he would be able to play on Boxing Day and give us 40 overs over a test match which is quite a big ask at the moment," he said.
Reuters
- 1 Lerner targets Lambert appointment by weekend
- 2 Brendan Rodgers 'agrees deal to become Liverpool manager'
- 3 England must beware brilliant Belgium
- 4 Euro 2012 files: Notable absentees
- 5 Club-by-club guide: Players available on a free transfer this summer
- 6 Hodgson likely to play it safe... but how about a quick call to Joe Cole?
- 7 Lampard set to miss Euros as England turn to Henderson
- 8 James Lawton: Liverpool must show new man the respect he needs to do the job
- 9 Final curtain beckons for Lampard's mixed England production
- 10 Rodgers poised to complete Anfield move
- 1 Millions face financial woe as debt levels soar
- 2 Brazil rocked by abortion for 9-year-old rape victim
- 3 Anger over Christine Lagarde's tax-free salary
- 4 Plans to redevelop Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's house blocked
- 5 Krokodil: The drug that eats junkies
- 6 Image released of naked cannibal killed by Miami police as he ate homeless man's face
- 7 Class A drugs 'should be decriminalised,' says former drug advisor
- 8 Diagnoses of increasingly antibiotic resistant gonorrhoea infections rise by 'unprecedented' 25 per cent
- 9 James Lawton: Liverpool must show new man the respect he needs to do the job
- 10 Israel hints it may be behind 'Flame' super-virus targeting Iran
Experience the Heineken Hub
Get free wi-fi and exclusive i content while you enjoy a tasty pint of Heineken at participating pubs.
Can you imagine a career in teaching?
Be inspired to teach - let real teachers show you how rewarding the job can be.
A home to be proud of with Halifax
Download the Halifax's brilliant, free new Home Finder app, and take all the pain out of finding your dream home
Playing a game-changing role during the Games
Cisco is providing the solutions for London 2012's complex IT needs.
Enter the latest Independent competitions
Win anything from gadgets to five-star holidays on our competitions and offers page.
Business videos from commercial thought leaders
Watch the best in the business world give their insights into the world of business.
Career Services
Day In a Page
The problem with social mobility
France's sixth biggest city* goes to the polls (*that's London, btw)
Car-crash TV: Ferrari quits news after gaffes, rows and poor ratings
Bringing the IB to the East End





Comments