AUS v NZ 2019: Ponting looking forward to the battle between Williamson and Australian quicks

The three-match Test series between Australia and New Zealand will begin on December 12 in Perth.

Kane Williamson | Getty

Having made his Test debut in November 2010, Black Caps skipper Kane Williamson has come a long way. With 21 centuries from 76 Tests, Williamson is widely regarded as one of the finest batsmen to have come out from the Kiwiland.

However, Australian batting great Ricky Ponting wasn’t quite impressed with Williamson’s ability when he first laid eyes on him during New Zealand’s tour down under in 2011-12.

“Brendon McCullum said to me then ‘this kid is going to be one of the best players in the world’,” Ponting recalled recently to cricket.com.au.

“And I thought ‘really?’. He was pretty loose outside off stump and was going pretty hard at the ball.

“But when you see him now and what he’s developed into, he plays the ball later than anybody, he makes big runs, he makes runs consistently and he’s been talked about as a being one of the best players in the world for the last four or five years.

“And he’s their captain, so he’s a very important player for them.”

Since that 2011 tour, Williamson’s game has improved by leaps and bounds and Ponting is looking forward to see the Kiwi skipper back on Australian soil for the three-match Test series, starting December 12 in Perth.

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“I’ve seen him turn himself from an ordinary T20 player into a very good T20 player, and that’s not an easy thing to do,” Ponting says of Williamson.

“That says a lot about the skill that he’s got.

“He’s a bit like Smithy (in Test cricket); he’s very regimented in the way he plays, he plays the ball late, he doesn’t get a big stride at the ball. But he’s just really hard to get out so I’m looking forward to the battle between him and our quicks.”

Williamson had scored twin centuries in New Zealand’s 2015 tour of Australia and Ponting shared some tips for the Aussie bowlers to keep the prolific batsman under check this summer.

“I think you’ve got to bowl to him a little bit like I think how you should bowl to Smithy - on a fourth or fifth stump line and reasonably full,” he said.

“He plays the ball really late and drops the ball down to third man a lot, so I think your third slip can be up really close to make him think he can’t play that shot in case it carries to slip.

“(You should) play around with the field behind the wicket, just to get him thinking about it. He looks like one of those guys that, like Smithy, once they get into their bubble and they’re happy with the way everything’s going, you can’t unsettle them, and you can’t get them out.

“So I think you have to unsettle him first and sometimes that’s as easy as just a strange field placement. Put someone in a different spot just to get the batsman thinking ‘what are they doing here?’

“If you just get him thinking something different, you can be a step ahead.”

(Inputs from cricket.com.au)

 
 

By Salman Anjum - 04 Dec, 2019

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