Most importantly, he has fixed a technical flaw that was undermining his
entire game. On Melbourne Cup day last year, Ponting shuffled across
his stumps in Potchefstroom and was lbw to Vernon Philander for 2. He
went on to be dismissed cheaply in the same way in three of the four
Test innings that followed, once by Philander and twice by Dale Steyn.
It was a trigger movement that was threatening to end his career.
"It was technical. You don't go from playing the way I was playing to
getting hit on the pad as often as I was without something being wrong,"
Ponting said in Brisbane on Tuesday. "The frustrating thing for me
through that period was that I identified it really early in the series
and I was training really hard and trying to rectify it and still
getting out the same way. It just took a long time to break the habit
that I was in and the cycle I was in.
"I'm doing things a little bit differently at training now, with the way
that I train and prepare. Some of the drills that I'm working on have
made me feel a lot better balanced at the crease and certainly not
getting hit on the pad as much as I was 12 months ago. My pre-ball
movements were a little bit earlier than what they normally were. I was
trying to move early to give myself a little bit more time but it was
actually having a detrimental effect. I was actually moving too early
and locking off and not being able to move again after that."
Gradually, he worked out how to address the problem and the runs piled
up during the home series against India in December and January, when he
made 62, 60, 134, 7, 221 and 60 not out. He made more runs in that
series than he had in his previous four series combined. Ponting has
tried not to look back at that South African tour too often since then,
but he concedes that things couldn't have gotten much worse.
"There's no doubt it was a lowlight," he said. "I was training really
hard and not getting the results I was after. At that stage where I was
batting we needed to be getting results if the team was going to win
games. Whenever you fail it's not just about you, it's about feeling
like you've let your team-mates and your mates down. It was a low
moment.
"I batted my way back in the second innings of that last Test match over
there and then started the series well here against New Zealand and
things turned around in the summer. Pretty much from the end of that
series in South Africa until now I've been a pretty consistent run
scorer in all the games I've played. Some of the things I'm working on
are starting to pay dividends."
Now, Ponting finds himself preparing to take on Steyn, Philander and
Morne Morkel once again, this time at the Gabba, a venue that fast
bowlers always enjoy. Steyn is the ICC's No.1-ranked Test bowler and
Philander, who debuted in Cape Town during last year's series against
Australia, has rocketed to No.2, while Morkel sits at No.9. Ponting said
despite the class of South Africa's attack, Australia's experience at
the Gabba would hold them in good stead.
"We know the ball swings around a little bit up here. All of our batsmen
have played enough here to know how to combat it," he said. "They're
all good bowlers and their records speak for themselves, especially over
the last couple of years. Philander burst onto the scene last year.
"We've played a lot against Morkel over the years and had a reasonable
record against him, us as a team, and Steyn is one of the best bowlers
of the last four or five years. The thing about their attack is they're
all different bowlers. They're all slightly different and that makes a
good attack. There's not much opportunity for our batsmen to relax but
that's what Test cricket is all about."
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