Ricky Ponting biography
Ricky Ponting, in full Ricky Thomas Ponting, byname Punter, (born December 19, 1974, Launceston, Tasmania, Australia), Australian cricketer who was the nation’s premier batsman within the Nineteen Nineties and early 2000s.
Ponting gained a status as a cricket prodigy when he scored 4 centuries (a century is 100 runs in a single innings) for the Under-13s in a Tasmanian cricket week and two extra when promoted to the Under-16 crew. By age 20 he had made his Test (worldwide match) debut and had been hailed by some as the brand new Don Bradman, who was thought of by many one of the best cricketer of the twentieth century. A maiden Test century got here at Leeds on the 1997 tour of England. Ponting was criticized for his inconsistent performances early in his profession (prompted, partly, by off-field private troubles), however, after rededicating himself to the game, he turned a key consider Australia’s dominance in worldwide cricket over the following decade.
In 2002 he was rewarded with the captaincy of Australia’s one-day worldwide facet, and the following 12 months he led the facet to victory within the Cricket World Cup in South Africa, considered one of three World Cups gained by Australia with Ponting on the squad (1999, 2003, 2007). When Test captain Steve Waugh retired in 2004, Ponting was his pure successor. In 2005 Australia misplaced to England within the first Ashes collection underneath Ponting’s management. Ponting adopted that with a powerful 2005–06 season, whereby he scored 1,483 runs (a mean of 78 per match), together with seven centuries. In January 2006 he marked his one centesimal Test with innings of 120 and 143 not out towards South Africa in Sydney. Later that 12 months he was named the International Cricket Council (ICC) Cricketer of the Year and the ICC Test Player of the Year. Ponting captured a second ICC Cricketer of the Year award in 2007, after main Australia to World Cup and Ashes victories that 12 months. Although Ponting and Australia misplaced the Ashes in 2009 and 2010–11, he was named Player of the Decade by a panel of cricket gamers and writers for his stellar play between 2000 and 2009.
Ponting resigned his national-team captaincy in March 2011, shortly after Australia misplaced to India within the World Cup quarterfinals. He retired from Test cricket in December 2012, having scored the second most Test runs of all time (13,378; behind solely India’s Sachin Tendulkar) on the time of his retirement. In 2013 he retired from all types of the game. That 12 months his autobiography, Ponting: At the Close of Play, was printed. His different books embrace a collection of annual diaries that recount the cricket season.
