I was just browsing through Botham's Autobiography (first published 1994).
At the end of the book he selects an England XI and a World XI (13 actually which is much better than 11 to cover all conditions) from players he has played with and against. It is interesting to see the fast bowler he choses and the remarks he makes against each.
For the England side, he is clearly handicapped since it wasnt a great time for English fast bowling (has become worse since some would say) and he himself is probably the only one who would have made the grade if the two sides were to be combined.
The fast bowlers in the England side are
1. IAN BOTHAM
2. ANGUS FRASER :
At his absolute peak, before he suffered the hip injury that so badly disrupted his progress, the best of his type during my career. A close choice between him and Mike Hendrick and I wouldn't mind having either in my side, but Gus's ability to hit the bat hard with his 'heavy' ball gives him the edge. The fact that he returned to Test cricket after having been written off by so many experts is a good indication of his never say die attitude.
3. GRAHAM DILLEY :
Prior to his problems with injury he had the ability to swing the ball into as well as away from the bat at genuine pace. Injury free he could have developed into a real world class performer. Not the worst tail-end bat either.
4. BOB WILLIS :
A tremendous trier. You could throw the ball to him at any time in a match, regardless of the circumstances or how old the ball might be and his response would always be the same - let me at 'em. Shrugged off countless injuries to get out there in the field and at his peak was as quick as anyone I've faced. A great team man and an inspiration.
Well. Not an earth shaking attack nor any great revelations about them from Beefy. Now for the World side.
1. RICHARD HADLEE :
More control than any other pace bowler I have seen. Capable of generating real pace when necessary, his accuracy and ability to move the ball in the air and off the pitch made him extremely awkward to deal with. No batsman ever felt they were really in command against him.
2. CURTLEY AMBROSE :
Wonderful destroyer. So difficult to bat against because of the bounce he could extract. Never gave you anything you could remotely describe as a free hit. Lethal when in the mood. Not over keen on bowling but even less keen on batsman.
3. JOEL GARNER :
His most deadly delivery was a fast yorker that either broke your toes or the stumps. A bloody miser with the ball who, like Ambrose, never gave you a thing. Hated conceding runs so much that if you nicked one for four he would burst into tears ! If the wicket was doing a bit, his pace and bounce could make him as near to being unplayable as you can get.
4. DENNIS LILLEE :
The best fast bowler I have ever played against. A wonderful craftsman. He had everything.
Aha. Another Lillee fan Its amazing how many there are.
Also interesting to see how economical he is with words when talking of Lillee but perhaps there is nothing specific to talk of when
"he had everything".