Richard
Cricket Web Staff Member
I don't know about that. Up to the series against Australia in 1902/03, for sure. But from the time they beat England (admittedly not a truly representative best-XI of England, but certainly not a team that disgraced the name of Test cricket) in 1905/06 and acquired the famed wristspin trio of Schwarz, Vogler and Faulkner SA were more comparable to the WI teams of the last 6-7 years than Bangladesh or, more recently still, Zimbabwe.History treats Barnes surprisingly kindly in my view. That he was a very good bowler can’t be doubted but he did get nearly half of his test wickets at less than 10 apiece (and had it not been for Herby Taylor that average would have been considerably less) against a South African side that great grandpa Dickinson would have treated with the same disdain as the current generation treats Bangladesh.
BTW, it'd be great-great-grandad who'd have been the one judging the SA teams of the late-19th early-20th centuries. Great-grandad's time of starting to watch the game was more the 1920s - not sure he had much notable memory of pre-WW1 cricket. Not that the two of us ever spoke much about it as I was only 13 (and not quite yet so into the game as I have been since the summer of '98) when he left us.