It's a cop out to suggest that his claim to fame is solely his performances as well. Warne came at a time when spin was dead in Australia and revived it. He was a natural entertainer and a colorful character. He made spin ***y again. He had the substantial backing of the English press when he started out that hyped him into a league of his own. All of this contributed to his legend.
None of this takes away from the fact that his actual performances, while impressive enough to be considered a legend, have been bettered by several bowlers already in cricket history.
Again, cop-out. I have no problem with you thinking other bowlers are better, but the reason why is a cop-out. If only you could have watched Warne often enough to know that he was a great entertainer
because he made things happen on the pitch, with his bowling.
Who has the most fans doesn't mean anything tbh. Tendulkar has the greatest number of fans. Doesn't mean he becomes the greatest of all time. Nobody is actually claiming that his claim to fame is things other than performance but it is quite disingenuous to suggest that his performances alone makes him the greatest bowler of all time when clearly there is a very strong case for other bowlers.
I don't mean fans in terms of normal people - I am talking about when panels of experts, past and present have gotten together to rate people.
I don't think it is disingenuous at all to suggest because of his performances he is rated higher. The problem is, not all performances garner the same statistical importance and it is in that, that people like yourself have a hard time grasping why so many other people will rate one player over the other, in spite of their supposed statistical inferiority.
I'll give you an example: there may have been many times where McGrath will finish 2 for 40 or 3 for 60; but Warne takes 4 for 100. Statistically, McGrath comes out ahead; but in terms of the effect on the match, Warne has a much bigger role (especially considering he usually took big wickets or the batsmen that were generally troubling us most).
It's because of a lot of games like this, when in retrospect people look at the stats that they feel McGrath is getting the short end of the stick or Warne got too much attention for his theatrics but it's wrong. Warne got big attention because of his match-changing performances. He continued to grow in repute for replicating it time and time again, when it was expected of him. Unlike a lot of players he also had physical and personal impediments. He became a different bowler after the 90s, after his injuries. He could no longer use all his tricks, but he still thrived - in the 00s he strikes
as fast as McGrath does, just to give you an idea. It's because of all these intricacies you may not appreciate just how good a player may be. I admit myself, if I hadn't watched Warne and were judging him maybe in the future, I would be skeptical.
These are things you may not consider when you look at strict scorecards, but these are things that are in the mind of many of these experts or even fans, when they rate these players. That's why I do put weight on these opinions - I don't want to be missing out on another Warne.