Were the West Indians of 1980 better than the Australian team of 2000? You bet they were. By a country mile and then quite some more.
There have been great test sides over the years, but the great West Indian sides have, IMHO, never been equalled; either in pure cricketing skills or in the manner in which they played the game, the joy that they gave to the lovers of the game. True, they have had a couple of abrasive characters over the years, but the abiding memory of that team will always be that of their attitude to cricket, their sportsmanship, their love for the game and their exuberance. They didn't sledge; that one needed to stoop to such levels in order to win probably didn't occur to them; they didn't see the need for anything other than their cricketing skills to do that. Fairness, melded with awesome firepower, quicksilver flair, ruthless efficiency, and absolute confidence that comes from the knowledge that they were the best.
The 1980's WI team. A fearsome pace quartet, each one different from the other, attacking in four different ways. Holding, Roberts and Garner with Croft and Marshall battling it out for the last quick's place. Wayne Daniel not good enough to even get a game. Sylvester Clarke, Hartley Alleyne and Norbert Phillip playing county cricket because they couldn't come anywhere near the WI dressing room. Devastating batsmen and superb fielders. The batting line-up that included Richards, Greenidge, Haynes, Lloyd and Kallicharan. Without a shadow of doubt, the best test side that I've ever seen. For me, nothing has equalled watching those guys play cricket. The sheer aura of that team that captured the imagination of cricket fans all over the world. No team comes even close to them in terms of the respect that they commanded, the affection that they received. They were always fair, never arrogant, and they just didn't gloat.
What did you just say? That they didn't have a spinner while Australia had Warne? What material difference did that make? They were the team that beat India 3-0 in India; no team, with or without spinners, has ever come even remotely close to doing that during my cricket watching days. That WI side never felt the absence of a spinner; their over rates were excruciatingly slow by 1980's standards, but Lloyd had a point when he asked the whining English media: "Do you want us to beat you in three days instead of four?"