i disagree. a bowler like bond or akhtar (assuming they stay fit and play regularly) would catapult this team into the top echelon of test cricket pretty easily. england lack a spearhead - someone who can run in and take wickets. its as obvious as daylight. the likes of anderson et all aren't wicket-takers. as far as i am concerned, both bond and akhtar, and perhaps gellispie too, were the cream of the crop. there performances speak of themselves.Of course they are. That isn't the point - the point is that to make a substantial difference to England now would require a bowler of the very, very, very top branch of the tree. Anything below that (which some of those you named either were or, in the case of Bond and Shabbir Ahmed, didn't play enough to suggest whether they were or weren't) wouldn't change this team into an excellent one.
Yes I think Steyn is better But Bond of New Zealand was easily the best of modern day pacers. A real tragedy we lost him. He had it in him to be a great.A more pertinent comparison would be Steyn vs Johnson. Both are quick, both are world-beaters on their day.
I'd pick Steyn - but they're both really good.
SJS probably think Steyn is better?
Yep - agreed fully. Bond's my favourite pace bowler of the modern era: fast, exciting, accurate, and totally fun to watch.Yes I think Steyn is better But Bond of New Zealand was easily the best of modern day pacers. A real tragedy we lost him. He had it in him to be a great.
I often wonder, you know - did he? It's possible - nay, probable - that what made Bond so injury-prone was also a big part of what made him good, and if he'd used a different bowling-action to be less injury-prone, he'd have been a fair bit less effective.Yes I think Steyn is better But Bond of New Zealand was easily the best of modern day pacers. A real tragedy we lost him. He had it in him to be a great.
It would if it was a spinner of Warne's class.One big-wicket-taker won't make England a massive amount better.
Not really. The only thing that'd make that enormous difference would be a seamer of the highest class. A spinner would not.It would if it was a spinner of Warne's class.
Hmm.Not really. The only thing that'd make that enormous difference would be a seamer of the highest class. A spinner would not.
On the contrary, the most dominant teams in history have either had a four pronged pace attack that contains at least two all time greats or they've had a real world class spinner and a world class paceman.Not really. The only thing that'd make that enormous difference would be a seamer of the highest class. A spinner would not.
It looks better, but there's no way that one change would make England into anything other than a side offering some amount of challenge for a top-three slot.Hmm.
Strauss
Cook
Shah
KP
Colly
Prior (k)
Flintoff
Broad
Warne (c)
Anderson
Sidebottom
Looks a hell of a lot better, doesn't it?
So it would double their current performance.It looks better, but there's no way that one change would make England into anything other than a side offering some amount of challenge for a top-three slot.
They've also had an excellent batting unit, at least one other good-to-excellent seamer and a good wicketkeeper (ideally wicketkeeper-batsman).On the contrary, the most dominant teams in history have either had a four pronged pace attack that contains at least two all time greats or they've had a real world class spinner and a world class paceman.
Maybe it might (or maybe it might not). But it would not, as the question up for question is, turn them from a below-average team into an excellent one.So it would double their current performance.
I don't. Why does that impact on anything I said?Anyway I thought you didn't like rankings
Well that's all that was suggested. "A massive improvement", not "an all-time great team". If it raised England to the level of consistently matching and winning their share against the Australias, Indias and South Africas, it would be a massive improvement.It looks better, but there's no way that one change would make England into anything other than a side offering some amount of challenge for a top-three slot.
It looks better, but there's no way that one change would make England into anything other than a side offering some amount of challenge for a top-three slot.
It is only a technical criticism, but for someone who has avowed in this very threat that they don't believe in the ranking system, you used the ranking system as a measure of how good England would become with a Warne.I don't. Why does that impact on anything I said?