Clock ticking for Ponting, says Australia coach Arthur

MELBOURNE, (Reuters) – Ricky Ponting’s  international future could be in doubt if he fails to make runs,  regardless of the former captain’s standing in the game,  Australia coach Mickey Arthur has said.
Australia play the first of a four-test series against India  in Melbourne on Dec. 26 and the debate over the out-of-form  batsman’s place has polarised the nation.
Many former players and pundits have demanded the  37-year-old step down or be pensioned off, while others have  cited Ponting’s imperious record as reason enough to allow him  to decide the manner of his own exit.
South African Arthur said Ponting, the game’s most  successful captain and third most prolific run scorer in tests,  could not rest on his reputation or his value as a mentor to  Australia’s next generation.
“I don’t think anyone’s guaranteed a start,” Arthur told  reporters at the Melbourne Cricket Ground on Tuesday when asked  if Ponting would be retained for the Boxing Day test.
“Ricky Ponting is really vital to where we want to take this  team. We are really hoping that he finds his form and hopefully  that form is just around the corner.
“I’ve backed Ricky Ponting in, like I’ve backed Mike Hussey  in for a period of time because I think they’re crucial to the  development of the side.
“For our young batters, to bat with guys like that is  fantastic, but, again, they need to keep giving us ammunition,  they need to keep giving us performances.
“Nobody’s guaranteed a start, nobody’s got a privilege to  play in the Australian cricket team. They’ve got to be producing  the goods and giving us ammunition to play.”
Arthur, a member of Australia’s five-man selection panel  along with captain Michael Clarke, will meet with the other  selectors later on Tuesday to decide Ponting’s immediate fate.

BOOT CAMP
Ponting has scored two half-centuries in his past four  innings but appeared badly out of touch as he scored a total of  21 runs in the second test loss against New Zealand in Hobart  earlier this month.
The Tasmanian is nonetheless expected to be retained for the  first India test given the simultaneous failures of most of his  batting colleagues and injury clouds hanging over others.
Australia launched a three-day batting boot camp in  Melbourne on Tuesday for Ponting, Clarke, Hussey, all rounders  Shane Watson and Dan Christian, and wicketkeeper Brad Haddin,  hoping to avoid another stunning collapse against India that  cost certain victory in Hobart and brought defeat in Cape Town  against South Africa last month.
Arthur said all batsmen had been given frank notes about  where they had been deficient.
“I think we just want to see Ricky accessing the ball a  little bit and part of this preparation the next couple of days  is just to free him up,” he added.
Watson, who was ruled out of the two-test New Zealand  series, is expected to be fit to slot back into the batting  lineup for the Boxing Day test but may not bowl as he recovers  from a hamstring injury.
Batsman Shaun Marsh would struggle to play a part after  being out of competitive cricket for six weeks with a back  injury, Arthur said, potentially opening the door for the  untried Ed Cowan in place of opener Phil Hughes, who is expected  to be dropped.
Australia also appear set to retain the youth-led attack  that bowled admirably in the test series against New Zealand,  with 32-year-old paceman Ryan Harris no certainty to come into  consideration.
Harris, who suffered a hip injury during the South Africa  tour, will return to competitive cricket with a domestic  Twenty20 fixture later on Tuesday.
“He’s got to prove to us that he would be able to play on  Boxing Day and give us 40 overs over a test match which is quite  a big ask at the moment,” he said.