Pained Ponting concedes powers on wane after Ashes loss

MELBOURNE, (Reuters) – Heart-broken after failing   to regain the Ashes today, Ricky Ponting was forced to   admit the captaincy issue was out of his hands and his powers   with the bat may be on the wane.
His team lost their remaining wickets before lunch to   concede an innings and 157-run defeat to England in the fourth   test, allowing the tourists to forge an unassailable 2-1   series lead and take the Ashes home for the first time in 24   years.

Ricky Ponting
Ricky Ponting

Ponting, whose struggles with the bat have mirrored   Australia’s underwhelming campaign, became his country’s first   captain in 120 years to lose the Ashes three times.
“I guess the fact that I lost those three series is   disappointing for me, hopefully I’m not only remembered as   that guy, the guy that lost those three Ashes series,” the   36-year-old told reporters.
“As a player in the series I haven’t achieved what I   needed to achieve for the team to be in with a chance to win   the Ashes back which I’m very disappointed about.”
Ponting scored 10 and 20 in both innings in Melbourne and   as Australia’s bowlers were put to the sword in England’s   innings of 513, his frustration spilled over into a heated   tirade against the umpires over a failed video review on Monday.
He was fined part of his match-fee and later apologised   but may find little forgiveness from a shattered Australian   public after the team’s slump in the five-test series.
Ponting holds the record of 48 test wins at the helm, but   has never been perceived as a great captain at home, where   Ashes defeats to bitter rivals England are regarded as   virtually unforgivable.
He led Australia to a 5-0 whitewash of the tourists in   2006/07, but the triumph was bookended by losses on tour in   2005 and last year.
Criticism of his captaincy has been his cross to bear and   he has worn it defiantly amid his team’s long decline   following the retirements of greats like Shane Warne and Glenn   McGrath.
But his sublime gifts with the bat, which have yielded 39   test centuries over the course of a glittering 15-year career,   have never been in question.
That they are now following a series in which he has   scored a solitary half-century from eight innings, has proved   almost as galling to the Tasmanian as defeat to bitter rivals   England.
“I wish I knew,” Ponting told reporters with furrowed   brow, when asked to explain his form lapse.
“I’ve trained the same way, I felt like I’ve been well   prepared for every game.”
“We’ve had four tests and eight innings, a few of those I   probably felt I hadn’t done a lot wrong to be dismissed.
“When you’re having a run like I’m having at the moment,   you tend to try and find ways of getting out and the game can   just really grab hold of you and you feel like you’re unlucky   all the time.”

MOVE DOWN?
Ponting has stuck barnacle-like to the number three   position for most of his career, but admitted that selector   Greg Chappell had talked to him about a possible move down the   order to number four before the opening Brisbane test.
The notion was a “two-minute” conversation at the time,   Ponting said, but conceded the following three tests had taken   their toll.
“I guess there’s been a few doubts creeping into my mind   over the last couple of weeks, I’m not going to hide that,” he   said.
“I definitely have to re-evaluate where I’m at as far as   where I bat in a test match is concerned.”
The free-scoring Usman Khawaja, an untried Pakistan-born   cricketer, had been floated as his successor.
Ponting praised Khawaja as one of Australia’s most   technically-gifted players, but suggested his place at number   three would not be conceded without a fight.
“If it happens to be someone from outside the team coming   into bat at that position then they have to make sure they’re   ready for it, its not an easy position to bat,” he said.
Speculation has been rife that the 36-year-old may step   down as captain or skip next week’s fifth and final match of   the series to rest the broken finger he sustained in the third   test victory in Perth.
Ponting made it clear the selectors, who will meet today and put out a 12-man squad tomorrow for the fifth   test, would have to drag him out kicking and screaming.
“It’s out of my control,” he said, grappling for words to   convey his determination to stay on.
“I’ve tried my hardest over the last few weeks to go play   well and try to lead the team as well as possible.
“I want to keep playing, I would love to keep leading the   team and think I’ve got a lot to offer in both of those regards.
“I’m trying to do the right thing by my team and by   Australian cricket and I think that I’ve right through my   career done it most of the time.”