Perth, Nov 29 (IANS): Cricket Australia Thursday congratulated Ricky Ponting on his cricketing career, describing him as one of the best ever to pad up for his country.
Ponting, Australia's 366th Test player and 42nd Test captain, announced Thursday that the Test match here South Africa starting Friday will be his last.
It will be his 168th Test for Australia, equalling Steve Waugh's record for the most number of Tests played by an Australian.
Ponting, 37, has scored 13,366 runs at an average of 52.21 in the 167 Tests he has played with a highest score of 257. He has also scored 41 centuries and 62 half-centuries in his 17-year-old cricketing career.
CA chairman Wally Edwards said Ponting's retirement decision and announcement was typical of the way he had approached his cricket since becoming a first class player in his teens and a Test player at 20.
"Ricky is always uncompromisingly straightforward and leads from the front. He has made a decision that he believes is best for him, his family and his team," said Edwards.
"On behalf of Australian cricket, I congratulate him for his outstanding achievements as a batsman, captain and, after he stood down as captain, leader by example."
CA chief executive officer James Sutherland said he and Ponting had exchanged messages after the latter had made his decision overnight.
"Ricky has had an extraordinary career and has made an extraordinary contribution, including through the example he has set for other elite players and through the excitement he has given fans, young and old," said Sutherland.
"There is much to admire, including his pride in his roots at his local cricket club that he spoke so eloquently of at last month's Bradman Oration, through to the fact that he takes to the field tomorrow for his 168th Test as one of the best prepared players in the modern game.
"I think his record until he retired as captain was outstanding but my respect for him since then has actually increased, seeing first-hand how he stepped back to become a total team player, absolutely committed to his captain, unstinting in his work to help other players and single-minded in his view that everything, including his own ambition, must always be second place after whatever was best for the team," added Sutherland.
Sutherland said it was too early to discuss yet but he sincerely hoped Ponting would stay connected to the game in an official capacity after his Test career.