Ponting ‘blown away’ as time-wasting row rages

LONDON,  (Reuters) – A day before the start of the  second Ashes test, the “time-wasting” row from the finale of  the first match refuses to die down with Australia captain  Ricky Ponting weighing in again yesterday.

“I have been a bit blown away by all the fuss over my  comments on England’s physio and 12th man in Cardiff,” Ponting  wrote in the Daily Telegraph.
“As I tried to explain that night, I was disappointed when  they came back out on to the field for a second time, but it  had no bearing on the game. Now it seems as if we’re all  talking about that one little incident, when we’ve just  witnessed one of the great climaxes to a Test match.
“It’s all done and dusted, it was over within a couple of  minutes, and the players have all moved on.”

England sent on their 12th man twice in two overs as well  as their physio as tailenders James Anderson and Monty Panesar  held out for a draw.
Captain Andrew Strauss said it was merely to convey  messages to the batsmen and that there had been no time  wasting.
Ponting, using the classic Australian put-down, described  it as “pretty ordinary.”

Former England coach Duncan Fletcher took issue with that  and wrote in yesterday’s Guardian: “Ponting has to be careful.  Someone needs to sit down and ask him what he understands by  the spirit of the game. The way he plays is definitely not in  the spirit.”
Ponting described Fletcher as “a very irrelevant person in  my life and probably in the cricket world at the moment.
“In recent years our record of players being reported or  stepping over the line in international cricket has probably  been as good as anyone’s.”

‘CRASS HYPOCRISY’

Others were not so keen to let the tourists off the hook.
“Had the words been spoken by just about anyone else on  Planet Cricket, they might have carried some weight, but from  the diminutive Aussie they smack of crass hypocrisy,” wrote  Matthew Syed in The Times.

“This is a man who has turned slow play into an art form.  Australia have been fined 33 times for slow play since 1995: 20  of them under Ponting’s captaincy and eight times since the  start of 2008.

“This is a man whose attempts to put pressure on umpires  has become so sustained, insistent and aggressive that it has  started to cause concern at the highest levels of the game.

“This is a man who has been fined six times for breaches of  the ICC Code of Conduct (in addition to the fines for  time-wasting).
“Had the positions been reversed, we all know what would  have happened. Ponting would not merely have sent on the 12th  man and the physio; he would have dispatched the batting coach,  the doctor and the team toe-nail cutter.

“Hell, he would have sent out Dame Edna, Rolf Harris, the  cast of Home and Away and Skippy the bush kangaroo if he  thought he would have got away with it.”