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Ricky Ponting revisits memories of captaining Phillip Hughes, pays glorious tribute

Ricky Ponting

Ricky Ponting, who captained Phillip Hughes on his debut Test series, against South Africa in 2009, has paid glorious tribute to the deceased batsman in his eulogy while recounting the memories of them playing together.   

In his column for The Australian, Ponting writes,“I didn't really know him when he joined us on South Africa tour in 2009, but I knew he was going to open batting in first Test and I went out of my way to talk and spend time with him .. I tried to get as close as I could." 

"He was a really impressive young guy. He wanted to learn and he had that respect that you find in a lot of country kids and he listened closely. The thing that made my job easy was that he was just so likable."

Saw shades of Adam Gilchrist in Hughes 

Hughes started off his Test career with a duck in the first innings of the first Test, at Johannesburg, but recovered well to score 75, 115 and 160 in his next three innings against a bowling attack that boasted the likes of Dale Steyn, Makhaya Ntini and Morne Morkel. The left-hander, with his twin centuries in the second Test at Durban, became the youngest player ever to register a ton in both innings of a match. 

Ponting writes, "South Africa had a pretty fair bowling attack, but it was not long until he was hitting them to all parts of the ground. You could see they really were surprised by his unusual strokes and you have to remember that for a little bloke, he could really belt the ball. A 20-year-old on debut is not supposed to hit Dale Steyn back over his head, but that's what he did," the former captain wrote.

"He took it up a notch in the Durban Test. There were shades of Gilchrist in the way he cut and plundered bowling there. I had seen Gilly do the same thing at that ground, but not many other people can get away with that sort of batting.

".....in second innings when he got 160 I can tell you the bowlers were into him big time. Dale, Morne Morkel and Makhaya Ntini were going hard with the ball and a bit of verbal. I thought I'd better go down and check how he was, but before I got there he looked up and grinned at me 'I'm absolutely loving this'." 

Better than Graeme Smith

Ponting, while admitting that Hughes did not have the greatest of techniques, compared the youngster with former South African captain Graeme Smith, who made it big in international cricket despite not being technically sound. In fact, the 39-year-old even rates Hughes higher and feels sorry for the player who, according to him, passed away just as he was in the cusp of making it big. 

The three-time World Cup winner writes, "That was the thing about Hughesy: he loved batting, the harder it was the more he loved it. He just wanted to be out there. Steve Waugh was like that and so was Justin Langer, but not everybody finds it fun being under so much pressure. You know that is what made him such a prolific scorer at first-class level. He never wanted to leave the crease because that was where the party was.”

"If there was a knock on him, it was that people did not rate his technique and there is no doubt he could make things look difficult at times, but that did not concern me. Graeme Smith is the same and he made a lot of runs. Hughesy was, in my opinion, a better bat than Graeme.

"The tragedy in cricket terms here is that we did not get to see him genuinely ply his trade. I am sure he had a lot of Test cricket in him and he was going to make a lot of runs. He was ready to take the next step."

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