Michael Clarke mentioned he fought with the Australian selectors to maintain Ricky Ponting within the crew after he took over as captain after the 2011 World Cup.
Ponting, who has earlier been essential of Clarke’s perspective as vice-captain below him, was being thrown below the bus after the change in captaincy, in response to his successor.
“When I took over the captaincy, I fought to keep Ricky,” mentioned Michael Clarke whereas talking on the Uncensored podcast.
Clarke mentioned, “The selectors said, ‘Very rarely does a captain stand down and stay in the team, so if you don’t feel comfortable … it’s time for Ricky to go’. I said, ‘We need him. We need him for his batting, but he’ll be another coach for us’. So I fought hard to keep him, I wanted him there. I thought he played a big part in helping that younger generation get to the level we needed to. If he was batting at 80 percent, he was better than anybody else at No. 3 or No. 4.”
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Ponting performed 16 Tests below Clarke between 2011 and 2012, scoring 1,015 runs at a mean of 37.59.
Ponting had stirred controversy along with his views about Clarke in his autobiography At The Close Of Play in 2013.
“It wasn’t that he was disruptive or treacherous, and publicly he said all the right things, but he had never been one to get too involved in planning sessions or debriefs at the end of a day’s play, or to volunteer to take on any of the captain’s workload,” Ponting had written.