Perm
Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
I see I've become tec again
Miller was an all-rounder, much more so than Davidson, so that certainly comes into play. Also, I've heard many people say that they consider Davidson to be better than Miller as a pure bowler. Lindwall is acknowledged as a better bowler because of his qualities though, something that his 'lack' of Test wickets make up for. He can often be seen in Australian all-time teams, because he was the better bowler.I honestly don't know that they do, TBH. I think Davidson is routinely considered automatically inferior to the likes of Lindwall and Miller who had relatively similar tallies. While this may be true, it also may not be.
Possibly, I'm not denying that Davidson was a fantastic bowler, because he undoubtedly was, but I think Wasim is better. Davidson probably does suffer from being a quiet acheiver, especially when he was surrounded by stars during his time playing Test cricket.I think the main reason virtually no-one ever remembers Davidson is that, apart from taking wickets at a phenominal rate, there wasn't really that much to remember him for. If Glenn McGrath had been as quiet as him, he might well be suffering a similar fate in 40 years' time.
Ruchira Perera? Ryan Sidebottom? Zaheer Khan?I only mentioned spinners because I couldn't think of another left-arm seamer than Wasim or Vaas (and I don't want to use them as I've argued in the past that both have qualities superior to McGrath).
Again, possbibly. There are better bowlers than Wasim who haven't made people's lists, that's for sure. But I feel that the people that did select him used the reasoning that his angle would help to add variety to the attack, without losing a great deal of effectiveness.Either way - I just think there were bowlers capable of that bit more than Wasim, who'd cause that bit more trouble than him, not because they bowled with the left-arm, but because they bowled with that bit more relentlessness.
TBF, this weakness has become more evident in ODI cricket, especially when the surfaces don't suit their four right-arm fast-medium bowlers, on pitches that are low and slow. That's when a spinner can add variety to the attack and turn an average attack into a good one, because it takes away from the monotonous nature of the bowling attack. Imagine if South Africa had a top class spinner when they had Donald, de Villiers, Matthews and McMillan. Their attack would have been far more potent.The trouble the SAfricans have had is nothing to do with a spinner and everything to do with the inconsistency of their seamers. Pollock was oft-written-off as gone until last season; Ntini has still to convince most people on all surfaces; Nel has still to hold down an undisputed Test place for long. They never had anything like these troubles when they had Donald, de Villiers, Matthews and McMillan, nor Donald, Pollock, Kallis and Klusener, because these 4 were all top-class.
It all depends on the quality of the bowler, of which I'm sure you are aware. If you have three good right-arm fast bowlers and a good left-arm fast bowler, he'll instantly make the attack more potent because of that variety. However, if he isn't as good as the right-arm fast bowler he's keeping out of the attack, then the attack's effectiveness will be primarily bbecause of the angle he brings, not the quality of his bowling.Of course variety can aid an attack, but it can do no more than turn a potent one into that bit more potent. A rubbish left-arm seamer is a rubbish left-arm seamer, and his variation will do far more harm than good. The same applies to fingerspinners and wayward wristspinners.