Thursday, May 22, 2008

Dominant Ponting back in touch

He's back, and he's in the same dominating touch that has plundered 35 test centuries at an average close to 60. That's right, the Australian captain Ricky Ponting has repsonded to claims he's out of touch with a big hundred, and watching it last night, it looked as if he had never been out of touch in the first place.

Ponting has had a rough ride the last 6 months, after speculation he was falling off the horse with poor showing against Sri Lanka and India and then a rather furitless stay with Kolkata in the IPL.

However, on day one of the test against the West Indies, he showed why he has as many test centuries as he does and why he is regarded up with Sachin as one of world cricket's finest batsmen.

His tendancy to fall across the ball early was muted by his techical decision to keep his bat closer to his pad, and whenever the bowlers pitched short, he was immediately cutting and pulling with savage intent.

The Windies bowled poorly to him, they had no real plan and did not exploit Ponting's usual weakness against the ball that moves into offstump. Harbajan, Murali and Ishant Sharma all exploited this weakness during the Australian summer, but no-one stepped up for the Windies, who looked really toothless.

It does not bode well for the Windies that Ponting is in form, with a taste for centuries back. Currently sitting just below 10,000 test runs, look for Ponting to start catching up to Sachin now.

Sunday, May 18, 2008

Hopes for a stronger contest

The last time Australia played the West Indies in a test series they had Brian Lara, who farewelled a country that considered him a genius with 226 in Adelaide.

Now, for the first time since 2005, the Windies face off with Australia for the Frank Worrell Trophy, generally revered almost as much as the Ashes in terms of cricket trophies. With no Lara, however, this contest could turn out even worse than three years ago.

The Windies have sunken from the prestige they used to carry in world cricket alarmingly and depressingly. Where once players like Lara, Ambrose and Walsh stormed through teams, they have not been replaced by players of the same quality.

This time round, the team is led by Ramnaresh Sarwan, a gifted but enigmatic player at test level, and the only batsman generally regarded as a major threat is Shivnarine Chanderpaul, whose record against the Aussies does not stand up to close scrutiny.

Admittedly, this is one of the best times now to face Australia. There is no longer any McGrath or Warne, and Justin Langer and Adam Gilchrist cannot flay their weakened attack around.

They still have strong candidates replacing them, with Brad Haddin, a wicketkeeper with a first class average of over 40 replacing him, and Phil Jaques has revealed himself to be a top test opener already after scoring heavily against India and Sri Lanka.

Australia’s bowling attack is no longer as powerful as it used to be, but Lee has emerged as one of the top quicks in world cricket, backed well by Stuart Clark and the raw but quick Johnson. MacGill, once his rhythm comes back, will plague the Windies batsmen, most of whom struggled with Warne.

I cannot predict anything but a whitewash of these tests, but I hope that players of the quality of Bravo, Ramdin, Sammy and Sarwan get a chance to shine and show the Australian side they are not intimidated by them.