Okay, after a re-haul...which took an hour or two...had to look through a lot of scorecards:
I just did a comparison on
Statguru, to check the other times that they weren't together.
Now it compares, interestingly, from the moment they both were in the team. Previously, they used to hold Warne's figures when McGrath hadn't even debuted against him. This, I believe, is more apt. (it's not that much different anyway).
Warne:
Tests: 18
Overs: 981.1
Runs: 2677
Wickets: 104
Average - 25.75; SR - 56.66. Compares very favourably with his career figures of 25.41/57.4; his average remains the same whilst his strike-rate improves.
McGrath:
Tests: 20
Overs: 731.5
Runs: 1701
Wickets: 72
Average - 23.63; SR - 61.15. Doesn't compare very well with his career figures of 21.64/51.9 at all. His average increases and, notably, his strike-rate rockets up. Of the two figures, the SR is the important factor when factoring in help from other bowlers. Pressure on the other-side doesn't necessarily mean less runs conceded (as McGrath's bowling is so tight he can hold up the runs) but it does translate into wickets, often.
Whilst doing this, I found many holes with this kind of comparison though, mainly:
- When Warne isn't available, it doesn't mean everything is constant and it reflects all about McGrath's form. Many times the others, like Dizzy or Macgill stepped up and made match-winning contributions that would eat into anyone's figures. But at the same time, that does mean the analyzed bowler has been as effective.
- Also, there are either whole series missed or some tests in a certain series. When looking at the 2nd type of absence, often the bowler analyzed has had a great series and the 1 absence of the other bowler in the series are his worst figures. That doesn't necessarily translate into, for example, Warne being poor because of that 1 test clearly showing the difference. Because in the other tests, even if the other partner was there, they bowled well regardless. A real example against the Saffies shows: Warne, he got
12/128 in one of the tests but it is discounted as this is not the test in the series where McGrath was absent. However, McGrath in that test itself got 2 wickets and was largely poor, so he couldn't have been much help. A real example for McGrath against the Windies shows he got
10/78 in a series where Warne was absent, but because he was present in that test these figures are discounted even though Warne picked up no wickets and was largely poor.
So when you look at it with a different perspective: just because a certain bowler is present in a match doesn't mean he helped at all. And in discounting a wonderful innings by the other bowler simply because of the presence of his partner, then you do him an injustice. I guess, just another one of those reasons why stats, even like these, aren't very exact. That being said, I'd agree with these figures overall.