Son Of Coco
Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
For 5 minutes...But when he was Number one, he was bowling great.
He was ranked number one largely on a single performance.
For 5 minutes...But when he was Number one, he was bowling great.
LMAO - coz no one would want a bowler taking 500+ test wickets at 21ish, because he bowls "boring".Exactly and not a boring metronome .A very exciting fast bowler
They should have just let the ball go Burgey...can't you understand how easy it was to play McGrath? He did nothing of note. 1/2 his wickets were under the tree on Christmas DayLMAO - coz no one would want a bowler taking 500+ test wickets at 21ish, because he bowls "boring".
Bet it wasn't boring for the bloke 22 yards away trying to play him.
Yeah good shout.Surely Harmison has to be the worst!?
Oh ho ...i was talking from a pure spectators point of view .We had Mcgrath as number one before Steyn who i didn't prefer to watch .Now Steyn as number 1 who i love to watch .LMAO - coz no one would want a bowler taking 500+ test wickets at 21ish, because he bowls "boring".
Bet it wasn't boring for the bloke 22 yards away trying to play him.
SecondedYeah good shout.
Surely Harmison has to be the worst!?
Yeah, agree with DCYE here. Outside of the more parochial corners of County Durham I doubt many cricket followers really believed Harmison was the best seam-up bowler in the world, whatever the rankings said, which is why I added this disclaimer:But while Harmison was "number 1" McGrath was still playing. Going on rankings in this case is silly as they are very rarely correct.
If we go by the old PWC (dunno who does it now) rankings then it's almost certainly Harmy tho, yes.Have to say that from the time I've been watching it's hard to recall a player who was (by consensus rather than ranking) regarded as the best who was such a (relatively) minor talent.
Quality.Dear Pasag,
I'm sorry to hear about the passing of your credible question that had the potential to provide some interesting, non-trollish discussion. It is with deepest sympathies that I send this card.
Yours Truly,
Clapo
Shocked you've overlooked the tragic Ken Farnes.The worst era for fast bowling was the void between Larwood in 1933 and the late 40's when Lindwall and Miller arrived - Off the top of my head I cant think of anyone in that era who was genuinely quick let alone of any real class
But Harmison wasn't the best bowler around at the time. No chance. He was just erroneously ranked so after 3 bad Tests and 1 good one.Surely Harmison has to be the worst!?
I'd have Wesley Winfield at his best as better than Steyn, no doubts. But the time when he was at his best was essentially the same time as Trueman and Davidson. He went on for maybe a year longer. After 1965, he too was a force of no great note.This is a really interesting thread (when you filter out the direness, which admittedly is a lot). Joining so late in the thread most of my thoughts have been articulated already by others but I think if we consider Brett Lee to have been the best fast bowler in the world a couple of years ago then he's inferior to Steyn.
Beyond that I reckon you'd have to go back to the late 1960s between the retirements of Trueman/Davo and the coming of DK Lillee. Wes Hall, Peter Pollock, Garth McKenzie and John Snow were very, very fine bowlers but I'd question whether they were clearly better than Steyn - there's not much in it in my opinion, which probably more than anything shows how highly I rate him.
I know we've been over this before but I would put Waqar in his early days (89-91) as up there with Shoaib / Lee for pace. I can't prove it, of course, and I appreciate that his late inswing might have given the impression of greater pace than he in fact generated.Also I don't think Waqar's pace was ever "dramatically" reduced as he was still bowling at close to 90mph against England in 2000/01 (despite very hot conditions) and 2001. At his very best, I can't imagine he was ever much more than 93-94mph at top speed (no-one ever talked of him being as fast as Shoaib Akhtar in his prime, whose average was 88-92 sort of range). I'm sure the injury took a bit of pace off him but I don't think it was much more than 3-4mph.
He'd have picked up quite a lot of wicket s by then though.I think that the extreme pace will desert Steyn after a while, after which time he'll come toward the pack so to speak. How far he comes toward the pack will determine his legacy, imo.
That's not true actually. Waqar at his peak was as fast if not faster than Shoaib, and many of the players who played with both Waqar and Shoaib attest to this fact. He was express pace (90+ average) but after his injury he struggled to even break the 90s barrier. Anyone who saw Waqar bowl afterwards knows he couldn't beat the batsmen out of sheer pace like he used to. And the fact that his injury can account for this can be seen in his dramatic and almost immediate loss of form after his back injury in 94/95, which coincided with the end of his peak.Waqar's back injury undoubtedly didn't help but are you really telling me that you think if he'd not suffered it he'd have been able to keep bowling as he bowled between 1990/91 and 1994/95 until, say, 2000/01? I don't. I can't see anyone keeping-up such sensational brilliance for more than a few years. Frank Tyson between '54 and '57 was in the same boat. Also I don't think Waqar's pace was ever "dramatically" reduced as he was still bowling at close to 90mph against England in 2000/01 (despite very hot conditions) and 2001. At his very best, I can't imagine he was ever much more than 93-94mph at top speed (no-one ever talked of him being as fast as Shoaib Akhtar in his prime, whose average was 88-92 sort of range). I'm sure the injury took a bit of pace off him but I don't think it was much more than 3-4mph.
But every indication is that Steyn seems to be learning how to be a better bowler, as he showed in Australia, and his outswinger doesn't seem to be going anywhere. It's rare for any major bowler to lose a natural stock delivery.Not being able to sustain the sort of form Steyn has shown the last 2-and-three-quarter years is not due to losing the script; it's just due to the fact that no-one can bowl so devastatingly for more than a few years at a time. It's just beyond capability. Steyn is bowling as well now as he is capable of in my book and no-one can bowl at the top of their game non-stop for 10-12 years.