Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Ricky Ponting's last test - Ozzy ozzy ozzy!!

How proud we were to see the South African cricketers forming a guard of honour for Ricky Ponting as he went out to bat for the final time!! Such a show of good sportsmanship - although Ricky said in a press conference later that he was a bit embarrassed (or words to that effect) he must have been very honoured to have been given such a send-off! Well done South Africa - you show such character. Getting him out for just 8 runs was just to prove you still have your cricket heads on!! Good on ya!!!


RICKY PONTING'S CAREER


1974: Born December 19 in Launceston, Tasmania.
1986: At the age of 12 he signs a bat contract with Kookaburra.
1992: Scores 56 against South Australia in his first-class debut for Tasmania, aged 17.
1995: February - Makes one-day international debut for Australia against South Africa aged 20, but is bowled by Eric Simons for one.
December - Makes Test debut against Sri Lanka, scoring 96.
1996: January - Makes his first ODI century with 123 against Sri Lanka.
March - At 21, becomes youngest batsman to score a World Cup century with 102 against the West Indies.
1997: Records his first Test century with 127 against England at Headingley in his first Ashes innings. However, he was in and out of the Test team for the next two years.
1999: A fight outside a pub in Kings Cross, Sydney earns him a suspension, but later in the year a century against the West Indies sees him cement his place.
2002: When Steve Waugh is dropped, Ponting vaults over vice-captain Adam Gilchrist to become Australia's ODI captain.
2003: Leads the team undefeated through the 2003 World Cup and makes an unbeaten 140 in the final.
2004: Steve Waugh's retirement opens the door for Ponting to assume the Test captaincy, and he wins his debut match against Sri Lanka in Galle in March.
Best ever: Ponting has more Test wins than any other Australia captain

2005: September - Becomes first Au
stralia captain since Allan Border to experience Ashes defeat as England win a thrilling series 2-1.
Ponting scores 1,544 runs in the calendar year, an Australian record.
2006: January - Becomes the only player to mark his 100th Test with a century in each innings, scoring 120 and 143no against South Africa in Sydney.
March - Scores 164 from only 105 balls in the fifth ODI against South Africa in Johannesburg, but sees the Proteas make 438 for nine in reply to Australia's 434 for four.
December - Leads Australia to a 5-0 whitewash of England with his two centuries seeing him pass Waugh's record of 32 Test tons for Australia.
2007: April - In a World Cup match against South Africa in St Kitts, Ponting passes the 10,000-run mark in ODIs, the first Australian to reach the mark and seventh man in the world. Australia win the World Cup undefeated.
2008: January - Victory in the second Test against India makes it 16 in a row for Ponting's Australia, tying a record. India win the next Test in Perth to end the run.
May - Scores his 10,000th Test run against the West Indies in Antigua. Border and Steve Waugh are the only other Australians to reach the mark.
2009: August - Having scored 150 in the first Test in Cardiff, Ponting's team lose another Ashes series in England. 2-1 win.
September - Retires from Twenty20 internationals.
October - Australia win the ICC Champions Trophy with Ponting the tournament's leading run-scorer. He becomes the third man to pass 12,000 ODI runs.
2010: January - Named by an elite panel as the world player of the decade.
December - Ashes series sees Ponting lose the urn to England for a third time, this time in front of Australian crowds. He struggles for runs as England win the series 3-1.
2011: February/March - After missing a 6-1 one-day series win over England through injury, Ponting returns to lead Australia in the World Cup but his century is not enough to stop them losing to India in the quarter-finals.
March 29 - Resigns as captain of Australia but says he wants to play on for the team.
2012: January - Scores 134 and 221 against India in a return to form, passing 13,000 Test runs in the process.
February 20 - Dropped from the one-day side for matches against Sri Lanka and India.
February 21 - Announces his retirement from one-day internationals, but vows to play on in Test cricket.
November 29 - Announces the third Test against South Africa will be his last before retiring from Test cricket after scores of four, seven, 23, zero and four in his last five innings.

 

No comments:

Post a Comment