For a moment, Ricky Ponting was a kid again. As he sat in the WACA gym 
and spoke one last time as a Test cricketer, the emotion finally got the
 better of him. Ponting, perhaps the toughest competitor of his 
cricketing generation, fought back tears as he thanked his family for 
all of their sacrifices. His wife Rianna was there with his daughters 
Emmy and Matisse. His parents, Graeme and Lorraine, were there too. It 
was a rare glimpse of the human side of one of sport's hardest men.
To understand Ponting, you have to understand his roots. Australia's 
most prolific run scorer was raised in working-class northern Tasmania 
and when he was nine or ten, he used to ride his BMX all around 
Launceston and the surrounding areas to watch the Mowbray Cricket Club 
play. He would sit in the change-rooms, rummage through the players' 
bags when they were on the field and try on their gloves, hold their 
bats. He helped run the scoreboard at the NTCA ground when Tasmania played there, for a few dollars a day.
At 11, Ponting was playing third-grade cricket with his father; when he 
became a first-class player, he financed new club-rooms with his first 
sponsorship payment. He learnt the value of the baggy green when his 
uncle Greg Campbell, Lorraine's brother and also a Mowbray player, 
played Test cricket briefly in the late 1980s. Ponting now lives in 
Sydney but has never changed clubs; if he was to play a club match again
 it would be for Mowbray. 
Ponting walked off the WACA on Monday afternoon having equalled Steve 
Waugh's record of 168 Test appearances. Nobody has been part of more 
victories than Ponting. He has played 560 international matches in 15 
countries around the world, or 24 if the individual nations that make up
 the West Indies are taken into consideration. As Ponting sat back and 
for the first time reflected on his 17-year international career, he 
became emotional when he considered where it all started.  
"I wouldn't be here if it wasn't for the opportunities I was given by 
them at an early age," Ponting said of his parents. A cough, as he held 
back the tears. "It's getting a bit harder". Sniff. "The Mowbray Cricket
 Club, if they see me up here like this at the moment they'll be all 
over me. That's the place I learnt the game and the person I am was 
moulded from my background and my upbringing. What you've seen over 17 
years is a result of my early days at the Mowbray Cricket Club. Thanks 
to the boys back there."
Tough as they make them in Mowbray, there wouldn't have been a dry eye 
there either. Ponting still keeps a close eye on his club's scores. In 
fact, he keeps a close eye on everything related to the world of 
cricket. The kid who sat in the change-rooms and listened to the 
first-grade players tell stories about the match they'd just played 
still exists. That's what will make retirement so difficult for Ponting.
 Cricket has been his life.
It is no surprise that he will play on for Tasmania this season, like a 
junkie being weaned off slowly. From Perth, he will fly to Tasmania to 
start training for the Hobart Hurricanes. The Big Bash League starts 
later this week and Ponting will be part of it. Always renowned as a 
realist, the dreamer in Ponting came through when he considered watching
 Australia's next Test, against Sri Lanka in Hobart, and joked about 
warming up with the Test players and earning a late call-up.
"You ask the boys in the dressing room, they reckon I don't miss a ball 
that's bowled anywhere around the world," he said. "Of course I'll keep 
an eye on it because I'll miss not being out there. I'll be interested 
to see who comes in and slots into the No.4 spot and I'll be interested 
to see what the bowling attack looks like for Hobart.
"The way it works out I'll probably be down there anyway. I've got some 
training to do for the Hurricanes, leading up to that game, so I'll 
probably be in Hobart just before that. Who knows, I might even be 
around for the first day of the game. If I am, I might even join in the 
warm-up with the boys and see if there's just one more chance!"
There's that kid in the change-rooms again. Pick me! Let me play! 
But for all of his cricket passion, Ponting knew the time was right to 
walk away from the international game. His scores over the past few 
weeks have confirmed it. Not that he had given up hope of ending with a 
match-winning hundred. 
"I had a bit more of a fairytale ending in my own eyes than what's 
happened this week," Ponting said. Just then, the pipes in the WACA gym 
began to squeal, almost drowning out his voice. "Still things are going 
badly for me here as well! It's been one of those weeks."
Apart from when discussing his family, Ponting was relaxed in 
retirement. He joked about the standing ovation he had received, and the
 one given to his nightwatchman Nathan Lyon on the first day. He thanked
 the media for promoting the game and held no grudges about the 
criticism levelled on him in recent times. He finished with a brief 
thought about his legacy.
"Hopefully my impact and input on Australian cricket has left something behind. Thank you."



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