I saw both bowl (though Hadlee only towards the end of his career).
Im certainly not going to say anything against Hadlee as he was brilliant but rather pick up a few points
I think it is a complete misassessment of McGrath as a bowler to suggest he would struggle with the more patient and obdurate of batsmen like Gaveskar and that he relies on false shots for wickets.
McGrath is often misunderstood and actually is more suited to bowling at the defensive player.
a) McGrath likes to settle into a line and length and find his feet. Once he has got going he uses that concistency to dominate the batsman
b) McGrath tries to make the batsman play every ball. To different players that is a different line. However, he pursues a batsman by always being at him
c) As the batsman has to play every ball the small movement McGrath gets either way becomes very dangerous
d) As the batsman has to play every ball McGrath can use this knowledge to pull the batsman into different positions that they may not want to be in.
McGrath is far more suited to bowling at the defensive guys than those that look to lay shots against him and dont allow him to hit his lenths all day.
Consider the batsmen that have been a success against McGrath.
Average from balls bowled by McGrath
Defensive Players
Atherton- 9.89
Kallis- 9.83
Kirsten- 14.00
Dravid- 10
Dippenaar- 2.25
Hoggard- 0.75
Aggressive Players
Cairns- 45.83
Pietersen- 48.8
Lara- 41.4
Trescothick- 35.5
Astle- 39.75
There is a definate pattern
The way McGrath bowls he would have been more successful against the likes of Gaveskar and Boycott than the likes of Richards and Botham
Another point on McGraths record. Whilst he bowled in a fine team he seldom got the opportunity to bowl at the tail compared to other seamers. He was effectively denied a large number of cheap tailend wickets.
Im not going to vote as I think its a toss up, but I think people are doing McGrath a disservice.