No thought of quitting despite Ashes pains – Ponting

SYDNEY, (Reuters) – Ricky Ponting may be just one   test defeat away from becoming the first Australian captain in   120 years to lose three Ashes series but he is not   entertaining any retirement thoughts.
Ponting, who turns 36 on Dec. 19, has not been at the top   of his form with the bat while his team trail England 1-0 in   the five-match series with three tests remaining.

Ricky Ponting
Ricky Ponting

“My absolute focus is on all the things within my control,   preparing the team and myself to perform at our very best in   Perth, Melbourne and then Sydney over the next three tests,”   Ponting wrote in the Australian newspaper on Saturday.
“I have not stopped for one moment to consider retirement.   The question of my future as captain is ultimately a decision   for Cricket Australia and categorically the future of   Australian cricket must come first.
“I have every confidence in my ability to score runs and   be the experienced batsman and leader that my teammates can   rely on.”
“As captain, I am accountable for the performance of my   team and I accept that our most recent results mean that I am   being assessed more critically than at other times in my   career as captain.
“The team is my priority, not my own ego or the status   that comes with being the captain of the Australian cricket   team.”
Ponting conceded England had dominated the series so far.
“We’ve been ordinary, we’ve played poorly. I haven’t   played the way I would like to have played, especially in   Adelaide, but I don’t think I’m that far away.
“I’ve got to keep trusting the way I prepare and play and   keep working hard. If anything I might have worked a bit too   hard on my batting over the last couple of weeks.”