Arthur Crabtree wrote:Haven't looked this up, it's just my vibe. But I think of Steve Smith and Ponting as filling their boots when the Aussies are winning 5-0, but not so much when it's close. And Mike Hussey the other way around. I'd have had Mr. Cricket higher than 60.
I honestly think that you could make a case that Ponting's innings with Matty Elliott in Leeds in 1997 was a significant Ashes moment and came to define the order between teams for the next near decade. England had thrashed Australia in the first test, had fought back for a draw at Lords (scored 300/4 to save the game on day 5), had been beaten in OT... and after 3 games, it was 1-1 and England for the first time in the 90s felt like they were in the series. In tough conditions, England got bowled out for 200 odd, but then ripped out the Aussie top order in no time and Ponting coming in at six under huge pressure played an absolute blinder with the ball zipping around everywhere, Australia turned 40-4 into 500/something declared and England never really ever recovered their mojo for another 8 years after. I remember the sense of deflation, which was completed at Trent Bridge the week after when Australia romped to victory.
Easy to remember as well that the 2002/03 series was seen as a close series with England having high hopes.... I think Punter scored 3 back to back hundreds in each of the first 3 tests?
And then in 2006/07 when the curse was broken, its easy to say he scored runs kicking a dead body..... but I think he scored 400-500 runs in the first two tests, so you could argue he is the reason for the dead body in the first place.
OT 2005 was another legendary innings from Punter at a time his team desperately needed it.