i saw a lot of viv richards from 1983 (when television coverage came to my part of the world ) to 1991 (when viv retired).
it is not just the stats, which are very impressive, but the impact he had on the result of the matches that make me choose him over anybody else even today as the best batter i have seen in 25 years of cricket watching.
for the younger members of the forum, all i can say is he was as special as gilly or warne. now, you know sangakkara and flower average more than gilly and can also keep wickets. you also know mcgill and kumble average more wickets per test than warne. and murali concedes less runs per wicket. still, most cricket fans nominate gilly and warne as their choices in their dream teams. likewise, viv richards walks into the middle order of everyone's team simply because of his unmatched ability to change any game. hitting across, over the bowler's head, sweeping behind square, cutting through a packed off side field, hooking without a helmet, shepherding the tail to keep piling runs for the team, setting up big totals in double quick time, hitting the best bowler of the opposition out of the attack... he did it all... again and again...
oh.. please.. dont compare him with afridi. afridi is a great entertainer but he is a walking wicket. richards was a truly attacking player in an era of fantastic fast bowlers. he was quicker than lara and tendulkar. pietersen is a better comparison. but again, let pietersen end up with an average of 60 after 120 tests (considering this is a batsman friendly age) then i will put him on par with viv.
richards' technical correctness and amazing control of emotions kept him as the leading batsman of the world from 1976 to 1988. that is long enough to be bestowed greatness. true.. chappell, miandad and border averged more (that too marginally) in the middle order and gavaskar scored more from his opening slot; but richards turned around so many matches and dented so many bowlers' confidence and paved the way for his team's success that he had to be the best of his era. an absolute master..