silentstriker
The Wheel is Forever
McGrath, definitely.
Yeah, that's basically it. I think the fact I didn't really follow cricket while I was at uni meant I missed his best years, and I remember the rest more.Perhaps because the success he achieved in the first half of his Test career was virtually beyond comprehension - similar to Michael Hussey of more recent times.
And obviously, in the second half of his career he was no more than an average wicketkeeper-batsman who occasionally played some of the most astonishing innings' you'll ever see.
Ironically, it was in ODIs, his weaker format, that he was probably more notably remarkable.
Welcome to the forums. Miller has 5 votes, one less than Warney.Hi all
This is my first post so be gentle with me !!
I voted for Shane Warne but seeing Millar with no vote made me wish I'd voted for him
Not from Australia there haven't, and the only all-rounder better than him was a batting-all-rounder rather than a genuine, rounded all-rounder.Miller is good, but there've been other all-rounders better than him.
How many people on CW know much about cricketers from before the 1970s, never mind the 1930s? Even I don't know massive amounts about anyone before that famous Bradman's Ashes (except for the events of 1902 and 1905).No votes for Monty Noble?
I was talking about the world in general, of course. Imran > Miller.Not from Australia there haven't, and the only all-rounder better than him was a batting-all-rounder rather than a genuine, rounded all-rounder.
I think the mostly likely scenario would be lots of people queueing up to call you a pratt.What happens if you think Bradman isn't Australia's best player ever?
What happens if you think Bradman isn't Australia's best player ever?
Then you need to read a bit. Not even a book or two - just a few pages on the internet would do fine.
Clarrie Grimmett was one who famously thought Bradman wasn't the best Australian player. To say it now is, of course, heresy.I think the mostly likely scenario would be lots of people queueing up to call you a pratt.
Interesting that three of the noms in the poll are all recent retirees. And people publicly wonder why we aint what we weremI think the mostly likely scenario would be lots of people queueing up to call you a pratt.
Did he? I've read stuff from O'Reilly where he mentions extensively that many (from his own club) considered Trumper his superior (while conventiently stopping short of implicitly stating that he did such a thing), but not Grimmett.Clarrie Grimmett was one who famously thought Bradman wasn't the best Australian player. To say it now is, of course, heresy.
And one of the oldest chestnuts on cricket's tree - and even CW's.A big part of me loves Bradman's statistical magnificence. Another little part thinks it casts a rather dull shadow across these sorts of discussions.
Grace v Bradman - now there's a contest.
It'd have to be third-best for England. Grace and Hobbs are the top two for pretty well anyone who knows their stuff. The third, well, it's one hell of a question. I think there's so little clear-cut-ness that it'd be almost pointless. Hammond? Sutcliffe? Hutton? It'd just have to be one of the great batsmen of the '30s and '50s - there's never been an English seam-bowler of the absolute highest rank except maybe Fred Trueman and even he has the not-that-much-outside-England question that drags down all the best English seamers. And clearly a fingerspinner, even one of the calibre of Rhodes or Verity, would not be worthy as the worth of fingerspinners has declined with the covering of wickets in a way no other type of player has come remotely close to mirroring the decline of.I'd like one on England actually. They've had some cracking players going right back to the game's inception.
SF Barnes?It'd have to be third-best for England. Grace and Hobbs are the top two for pretty well anyone who knows their stuff. The third, well, it's one hell of a question. I think there's so little clear-cut-ness that it'd be almost pointless. Hammond? Sutcliffe? Hutton? It'd just have to be one of the great batsmen of the '30s and '50s - there's never been an English seam-bowler of the absolute highest rank except maybe Fred Trueman and even he has the not-that-much-outside-England question that drags down all the best English seamers. And clearly a fingerspinner, even one of the calibre of Rhodes or Verity, would not be worthy as the worth of fingerspinners has declined with the covering of wickets in a way no other type of player has come remotely close to mirroring the decline of.