silentstriker
The Wheel is Forever
Give us the final list already.
Nice to see an indian make the list, finally. I would have thought that Kumble would have made at least one list, but after all, he has only taken a mere 500 wickets.Hmm, interesting..
1. Warne
2. McGrath
3. Marshall
4. Hadlee
5. Bedi
6. Donald
7. Wasim
8. Holding
9. Trueman
10. Barnes
Almost made mine, tbh.Nice to see an indian make the list, finally. I would have thought that Kumble would have made at least one list, but after all, he has only taken a mere 500 wickets.
I believe Waqar had an operation on his back in 95' that drastically reduced his pace and potency.What happened to him that he was a great bowler in 1995 but suddenly became mediocre in 1995-96?
Sorry, but I watched him bowl here, and I saw him on TV/ in footage bowling elsewhere, and it's like he swapped passports with Glen Trimble when he arrived at Sydney Airport.
It may well be that the conditions didn't suit him here, and that's fine, but if he didn't perform as well here when others like Akram, Ambrose, Marshal et al did, then imo you have to mark them ahead of him (like the Lillee on the subcontinent argument).
Doesn't mean he couldn't bowl or that he wasn't a great bowler, I just wouldn't have him in my top 10 is all I'm saying.
I want to emphasise I'm not bagging the bloke, as I understand that he lives about 5 minutes from me now and if he reads this I don't need to make an enemy of a bloke who could still knock my block off if he came down to the nets!!
I came close to putting Prasanna in my list.Nice to see an indian make the list, finally. I would have thought that Kumble would have made at least one list, but after all, he has only taken a mere 500 wickets.
LOL, I'll save the thread started some time with this: It needs to be in order.Basically the Warne/McGrath debate IMO boils down to the fact that they peaked at different times. Pre Warne's injury I'd rather have him in the side and afterwards, McGrath. Over their whole careers, as social said, it's basically like trying to split the atom.
Anyway, my top 10, not in order:
Murali
Warne
McGrath
Ambrose
Imran
Hadlee
Lillee
Barnes
Marshall
O'Reilly
Home country biasTwo things I noticed when coming up with this: one, my home country bias is stronger with bowlers. Four Aussies make my all time top ten bowlers, whereas only one Australian ranks in my top ten batsmen of all time. Secondly, and this has already been noted in several others posts, while my ranking of batsmen has a more than healthy helping of grand old timers, my bowler list is very strongly skewed to the modern era of the past 30 years (and even O’Reilly over Ambrose is a push). I don’t really have a satisfactory explanation for this, though perhaps I feel that the art of bowling is continuing to evolve and develop, whereas batsmanship has remained somewhat constant? I’m really not sure.
Both solid points mate.Home country bias
This is where it is difficult for most people to be objective. These are the players we see all the time, the ones we identify with, the ones who are playing for "us".
In Australia, How many times have we heard over the years in the media etc. of how great "our" Dennis Lillee or Shane Warne is? A LOT. And how much do we hear about the great exploits of other countries' players? Very little if any.
By contrast, players from other countries generally don't have the same impact on us because they aren't playing for our team and they aren't hurting us because "we" are only one of a number of teams they play against - we see them a lot less.
It's probably the same for most countries.
Bowler list skewed to the modern era
I would say bowlers for the most part have the greater immediate impact/impression on the cricket viewer than batsman. Just one ball/wicket or two quick wickets, often changes the course of an innings or sometimes the match whereas 1 great shot or 2 quick boundaries by a batsman is much less likely or never going to decide a match.
Bowlers have that immediate impact that will stick in the memory.
Hence, bowlers in the modern era (who we have witnessed) are favoured against the old-time bowlers more than modern batsmen are favoured against the old-time batsmen.
Convincing victory for Macko. But honestly, I sometimes think people who vote in these exercises should be barred until they can repeat the deeds of Sydney F Barnes to at least a relatively satisfactory degree.Final Top 20
1 Marshall 255
2 Hadlee 180
3 Warne 161
4 McGrath 149
5 Barnes 145
6 Lillee 135
7 Muralitharan 134
8 Ambrose 130
9 Imran Khan 102
10 Wasim Akram 71
11 O'Reilly 39
12 Trueman 38
13 Donald 26
14 Lindwall 24
15 Holding 17
16 Waqar Younis 14
17 Walsh 13
18 Lohmann 12
19 Garner 9
20 Grimmett 9
Barnes dropped down to 5th. Warne wins out against McGrath. Lillee wins a close battle for 6th from Murali and Ambrose. Then a huge gap back to Imran, a huge gap back to Wasim, then a huge gap back to 11th.
I am actually surprised that only one person voted for Garner. I bet he gets more votes if I do a One-day list.
Besides for the spinners, which ones exactly?Convincing victory for Macko. But honestly, I sometimes think people who vote in these exercises should be barred until they can repeat the deeds of Sydney F Barnes to at least a relatively satisfactory degree.
Disgusted at some of the names above Donald, naturally, but I was obviously expecting that. Nice that if it couldn't be Barnes on top it was Marshall, though - by a convincing distance.
I hope that maybe the votes for Warne if we do this again in 5 years time might have died down TBH.
Trueman and Wasim Akram for starters. Hadlee and Imran I can stomach easily, Ambrose and McGrath I can begrudgingly accept. Lillee disappoints me, naturally.Besides for the spinners, which ones exactly?