did anyone carry his team as much as hadlee in the 80's ?
Murali perhaps? Especially overseas?
Murali I'd say. Also Andy Flower. Allan Border in the mid-80s. Brian Lara and now Shiv Chandrapaul at times for the Windies.Nah, he had Vaas.
Overseas?Nah, he had Vaas.
Average of 32.5 is not that bad IMO. Zoysa and Malinga also average around 32-33 overseas. When IND, PAK and BAN removed from the equation (as they produce spin friendly pitches) Vaas still averages 33, Malinga 33.5 and Zoysa 31.5 to go with Murali's 25.9.Overseas?
when you are discusssing greatness, 32.5 is quite poor IMOAverage of 32.5 is not that bad IMO
I thought we were discussing about support, not greatness?when you are discusssing greatness, 32.5 is quite poor IMO
in the days of marshall, patterson, davis and walsh were the support acts. holding and garner were spearheads in their own right. although, due to the age factor, and ofcourse superior skills, marshall had his nose ahead of them since 82-83.Hmm, Vaas has a better overseas average than I had thought. Although, iirc, he does tend to not take too many wickets (on a wickets/test basis). Also, I doubt I can include Zoysa and Malinga as they are both, imo, a little too recent to count and have not taken enough wickets or played enough tests (although I might be a little picky here). Murali's ascent to greatness (if I can call it that) began in 97/98 after the home and away series to India (where, iirc, a couple of fearful tonkings from Sidhu made him revise the length he was bowling) and Zoysa and Malinga only begin to figure from 2006 onwards. Vaas, however, was - as you rightly say - there througout.
Also, if we are talking about support, then we should certainly count Chatfield and Cairns who were great foils for Hadlee. Although none of these, Sri Lankan or Kiwi, were or are in the same league as the WI 'support' quicks that Marshall had around him.
i challenge anyone to name a better attackYeah, Marshall's career - in terms of who he played alongside - is an interesting one. He first played Test cricket genuinely in 1980 in England, but his first 9 Tests (4 in England in 1980; all 4 in Pakistan in 1980/81; then 1 more at home to England in 1981) all came as a fill-in, when one or more of Roberts, Holding, Garner and Croft were unavailable. He mixed the good with the bad in this time (I'd say he had 3 excellent games, 3 moderate and 3 poor) and overall they produced an average of 26.41.
Croft left the team and in '83, Marshall finally became a first-choice, and on a couple of occasions played alongside Roberts, Holding and Garner in what is surely the best first-choice attack West Indies have ever fielded. However, Garner picked-up a bad injury meaning this lasted just 2 games. By the time he was back, and just 2 series' (both against India) after Marshall became established, Roberts then retired. For the next 3 years it was Marshall, Holding, Garner and someone else. In '84 against Australia and England, it was Baptiste. In '84/85, Walsh debuted. Then Winston Davis returned in '85, then in '86 it was Patrick Patterson debuting. In this "first leg", '83 to '86, Marshall picked-up 181 wickets in 33 matches at 19.64
The "second leg" of Marshall's career begun in '86/87, when Holding and Garner quickly waned and were gone. In the 36 matches comprising it, he picked-up 161 wickets in 36 matches at 20.10. His support acts here were the likes of Tony Gray, Patterson, Walsh, Bishop, Ambrose and Winston Benjamin. None too shabby by any stretch of the imagination, but somehow not quite to my mind in the Holding and Garner league - with the exception of the injury-plagued Bishop and, eventually (but not straight away, and not until Marshall's career was almost over) Ambrose.
Charizard's Fire Blast against a Venusaur, for mine.i challenge anyone to name a better attack
well, i think roberts, marshall, holding and garner combo is genuinely intimidating.i challenge anyone to name a better attack
This attack played together in 2 games and didnt win either (1 of which was agianst Zim).akram
younis
akhthar
saqlain
Not a chance. Lee only became a good bowler after McGrath, Gillespie and Warne were no more in Test cricket.well, i think roberts, marshall, holding and garner combo is genuinely intimidating.
but these attacks are also comparable i feel.
mcgrath
gillespie
lee
warne
TBF, Roberts-Holding-Garner-Marshall played just twice as a first-choice, against India in 1983 (IIRR, they won both games - they certainly didn't lose either). I don't give the Pakistan attack any great consideration as it played together at a time when Waqar was past his best and Shoaib, well, you can never truly know what's going to turn-up with him.This attack played together in 2 games and didnt win either (1 of which was agianst Zim).
IMO, neither the Pak attack or the Aus attack quite compares
neither of them are good enough, lee and gillespie bring down the quality of the aussie attack and akhtar and saqlain does the same for the pakistanis...the quality being referred to is comparative of course...well, i think roberts, marshall, holding and garner combo is genuinely intimidating.
but these attacks are also comparable i feel.
mcgrath
gillespie
lee
warne
akram
younis
akhthar
saqlain