Well played I suppose to MacGill. To paraphrase Joe Pesci from JFK, the bloke remains a contradiction, wrapped in a dichotomy, encased in a paradox.
Like the guy off the cricket field, but he was a tool as a person on the field, the reverse Warney in one sense. Absolute ball-tearing deliveries, in both senses of the phrase, mixed in with tripe that Michael Bevan would have been ashamed to send down the pitch. Intelligent thinker (itself a rare commodity in the sport) but a horse's arse who was often his own worst enemy. Frustrated could-have-been great had he been born in another country/time or Warne's stuntman who was fortunate to play a disproportionate number of tests in favourable conditions or when he was in the peak of his form.
He was a unique character, and inevitably his legacy will be overshadowed, as was his career, by S.K. Warne, but ultimately he did a difficult job coming in and out of the team, contributed to some good team successes, and took (by normal standards) a helluva lot of a wickets at an acceptable rate. Well played, and I hope he enjoys his retirement.