Ikki
Hall of Fame Member
Um, check the SR.
Vaas home - 180 wickets at 26.32, away - 175 wickets at 32.34
Lee home - 186 wickets at 28.72, away - 119 at 33.42
Next time check your facts instead of talking crap.It is amazing how biased you are - Asian batsmen are never given credit and 'they get more flat tracks' excuse is always used against them yet no mention of that when it comes to bowling.On top of that you are a liar. Sheesh.
Vaas home - 180 wickets at 26.32 with an SR of 60.7, away - 175 wickets at 32.34 with an SR of 70.3.
Lee home - 186 wickets at 28.72 with an SR of 51.3, away - 119 at 33.42 with an SR of 55.2.
Next time you want to reply...don't. You just embarrassed yourself.
If anything he became a much better bowler once he was leading the attack. Sure, there are positives and negatives about hunting in a pack, but when the two bowlers in question are taking so many wickets, I'd tend to consider it harder to strike so effectively. Any momentum you create by taking one batsmen can be used by other bowlers. Also, their percentage of top-to-mid batting order wickets taken is pretty much the same.And he benefited from the fact that McGrath, Gillespie and Warne would often do what he was unable to, in knocking-over the best batsmen. No coincidence that, outside 2007/08, Lee did even worse when he was surrounded by fellow ordinary\crap bowlers rather than when surrounded by excellence.
Playing with McGrath, Fleming, Gillespie, Warne etc. was, for the most part, a help to Lee not a hindrance. Still didn't preclude him from being utterly hopeless for most of his career though.
Frankly, I don't wish to argue with you about it as I've read some utter tosh from you about Lee and that's more than an indicator for me about how sensical it would be to debate it.
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