I voted for McGrath on that one - my reasoning was that Pidgeon is and will continue to be acknowledged as one of the greatest bowlers of all time, and that a career of achievement that he had outweighed one extraordinary performance (or several, to be fair) in the "Legend" stakes. My thinking was that Hayden doesn't become a bigger legend than Tendulkar because of his 380, or Massie / Hirwani bigger legends than a Marshall or a Warne because they got 16 wickets on debut.
However, I'm prepared to hold my hand up on this one and say I was wrong with the way I voted. I've been doing my best to vote on "status" rather than "quality" throughout these battles, but I think for this one I fell into the trap of voting for the better cricketer rather than the guy who occupies a position on a higher plane of cricket history. McGrath, for all his magnificence, wasn't particularly influential per se, nor did he produce a single to-be-talked-about-for-the-ages performance. He was simply consistently, ridiculously good year after year for a long time. I don't say this as an insult, but rather a reflection of his consistent quality.
Laker's 19-for, however, is the stuff of mythology, truly one for the ages. Hayden's 380 was broken in months, and someone, one day, will break Lara's 400. But I don't think anyone will ever have better match figures than 19/90, and indeed they will struggle to take more than his 46 wickets in a single Ashes series. And for that I should have voted Laker over McGrath.
Sorry Jim.