India Gazette
IndiaGazette.com Saturday 17th May 2008 Issue 1486
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  • UN Secretary-General not expecting UNMIN's mandate extension
  • India repatriates Pakistan fishermen
  • Sydney cricket ground stand not to be named after Waugh
  • 'Cyclone Nargis to have bigger impact than Tsunami
  • Abducted Pak envoy to Afghanistan freed
  • Pak has no control over two airstrips in its tribal areas meant for exclusive US use
  • US offer financial assistance for Pak judicial reforms
  • "30 pc of US aid siphons off as 'overhead expenses' before reaching Pak, Afghanistan"
  • Humiliated Sikh traffic warden files another complaint against colleagues in Pak
  • Islamabad Bar says Zardari-Musharraf nexus obstructing restoration of judges
  • Pak Army protests US drone attack in Bajaur
  • Pak envoy says US not influencing changes in Islamabad
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    Ponting goes hi-tech to overcome batting slump
    India Gazette
    Friday 9th May, 2008  
    (IANS)


    Skipper Ricky Ponting, who is going through an unusually long form slump, has taken recourse to hi-tech plasma screen gadgetry in a private batting tutorial to help overcome the misery before he leaves with the Australian squad for the tour of the Caribbean Friday.

    At Brisbane's Allan Border Field Thursday, an enormous plasma screen television was hauled into the practice net next to Ponting as he was filmed facing deliveries from a bowling machine.

    The video footage was fed through the plasma screen, on a five-second delay, enabling Ponting to play a stroke and then watch it replayed immediately on TV.

    Ponting, who endured a run of low scores in the summer's one-day series and failed to fire for Kolkata in the Indian Premier League, emerged from the net session delighted, reports Herald Sun.

    'It's the first time I've used that. It is the best little coaching session you can have,' said Ponting.

    'It's good to have a coach or someone standing by that knows your game. To have it explained to you is one thing; to see it for yourself and be able to identify yourself what you are doing during a shot is fantastic.'

    Ponting said he was not worried by his form slump -- most recently he scored just 39 runs in the IPL at 9.75 -- but the plasma session was a 'priceless' tool that could help him back to his devastating best.

    'Sometimes you know yourself what you are doing but to put your finger right on it is a little more difficult,' Ponting said.

    'With this set-up, you hit one and you give yourself time to have a look at the replay and digest it.

    'It can pick up everything, head position, backlift and whatever it is you want to work on.

    'I have used game footage over the years but to have it at training, especially when you are trying to get everything ticking over again, is priceless.'

    While he would not admit it, Ponting's batting was clearly affected by some of the dramas of a hostile summer against India, in which he was tested both on and off the field.

    It may have been Ponting's toughest time in cricket -- possibly even tougher than the 2005 Ashes loss -- and he even endured calls for him to be sacked as skipper.

    The first of three Tests against the West Indies starts on May 23 in Kingston, Jamaica.

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