Australia - South Africa, 2nd Test starts today:
Ponting seeks happy end to tough year
As Ricky Ponting's toughest year in charged of the Australian team
draws to a close he is facing one of the Test matches that could define
his captaincy. A loss to South Africa in Melbourne would concede the
series and cap off a disappointing year that began with a narrow but
controversial series win against India at home and continued with a 2-0
loss in India.
"Yeah probably," Ponting said when asked if 2008 had been his hardest
year. "Whenever the team doesn't have the success that we all want to
have then as a captain your responsibility is to cop whatever criticism
comes your way.
"The buck stops with me as far as our performance is concerned. I
think we've all been a little bit disappointed with the way some of the
results have gone. I think we all knew at the start of this year that we
had some very tough cricket ahead of us."
Ponting is leading the side through a period of uncertainty the likes
of which the country has rarely seen since Allan Border's reign. Ponting
was the first Australian leader to give up the Ashes since Border's men
regained the prize in 1989; he is desperate to avoid being the captain
to lose Australia's first series at home since Border's side went down
to West Indies in 1992-93. After South Africa's brilliant win in Perth,
Australia were left in the unfamiliar situation of being 1-0 in a
three-Test series. It is a position they have never recovered from for a
series win in their 120 years of Test cricket. For such a comeback to
occur this time, Ponting needs his senior men to lead the way.
Matthew Hayden and Brett Lee have come under the fire during the week
as both men have struggled to find their trademark spark and Ponting is
desperate for the pair to lift themselves on the biggest stage.
He also needs stronger contributions from the rest of the batting
line-up. Much was made of the failure of Australia's bowlers, Mitchell
Johnson aside, in Perth but it was the inability of the batsmen to build
an impregnable lead that frustrated Ponting as much as anything.
In the first innings they wobbled to 3 for 15; in the second they
teetered to 7 for 162. On a pitch where South Africa chased down 414
with six wickets in hand it was not a good enough effort. Ponting was at
least happy that the batting problems did not seem to stem from
technical failures or lack of ability.
"The top-order batting in both innings left a little bit to be
desired so that's one area that we all want to tighten up," Ponting
said. "For us as a batting group there's some positives that we can take
out of that, knowing that we all did get off to some good starts and
probably mentally more than anything is where we let ourselves down.
That's to be changed this week."
The experienced batting line-up is even more important in a side
whose attack is relatively young. Peter Siddle has kept his place and
will play his first Test at his home ground the MCG, despite taking only
one wicket in Perth, while Nathan Hauritz has been added for his second
Test of the summer.
The inexperienced men will be under intense pressure at the MCG,
where the crowds are massive and vocal.
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