Nope
If you'd ever seen them bowl you'd know that:
I have seen the whole lot of them bowl, plenty.
a. Garner bowled predominantly inslant with the variation of one that held its' line. Unless a yorker, he never pitched it up. He virtually never swung the ball. Great bowler but also quite negative.
He didn't need to swing the ball, he had enough going for him with his height and seam and cut. Ambrose rarely swung the ball either, but again - he didn't need to, he was exactly the same as Garner.
Too many people base too much on being able to do everything, and not enough on simple output.
b. Holding, for virtually his entire career, relied on one thing - pace. He didnt have 10% of Lillee's variation nor 10% of his stamina. His heart was also questioned more than once (Sydney '76, NZ)
You honestly don't have a clue if you question Holding for those two instances - one at the start and one at the end, neither of which he should have been playing.
And to say Holding relied purely on pace all career is, well, ridiculous frankly. You don't take 239 wickets at 21.69, around every country in The World (excluding a whole 3 Tests in NZ where the general consensus is that the West Indians usually had to get batsmen out 3 times before it went in the book) by relying purely on pace. In fact you don't do very well at all - look at Brett Lee. Holding actually had the ability to do near enough everything you could wish of a bowler, and if you listen to him talk about how he did this and that you'll realise such a thing. Saying Holding was purely a pace merchant is just relying on stereotypes.
Aside from height, Lillee had everything these guys had and quite a bit more PLUS whatever variations they had in their bowling, chances are he showed them how to do it.
What you dont seem to understand Rich is that Lillee was the first complete fast bowler (pace, bounce, swing, cut, slower balls etc etc etc). Many of the greats in the 80s learnt from watching and copying him. Have a look at tapes of Hadlee, Imran, etc when they first played Oz - pace and nothing else. Then they saw Lillee and started copying his methods
I couldn't care less whether many learnt from watching him - that doesn't mean they couldn't have done what he did even better.
In any case, to suggest Lindwall, Statham etc. weren't "complete fast bowlers" is nonsense of the highest order too.