Outswinger@Pace
International 12th Man
Disagree strongly with the 'much inferior' part.That Indian line-up, compared to the Indian line-up McGrath faced was much inferior. Especially away.
Marshall for a fair part of his career bowled to Gavaskar, Mohinder Amarnath, Vengsarkar, Shastri, Azhar (of the 80s) and Kapil Dev.
Amarnath was, by most people's standards, a prolific player of pace and his away record actually sets him apart from most. Gavaskar, for difficulty in dislodging from the crease, would rank above all Indian batsmen, SRT and Dravid included, IMHO.
McGrath bowled to a significantly medicore Azhar of the mid-late 90s, Ganguly (an average player of pace, extra bounce and movement) and VVS Laxman. His heroics against the Aussies notwithstanding, Laxman cannot be considered a fine player of swing and seam.
Sehwag played just one test away from home in which McGrath was also participating. Not a big enough sample size, tbh. And his record against swing and movement off the seam would suggest that Pigeon would have slaughtered him. Let's not forget here that we're talking about possibly the world's best exponent when it comes to landing the ball on the proud seam on a six-pence coin on the pitch. I very much doubt that Sehwag would have had the skill and application to negate the great fast bowler consistently in Australian conditions.
Except Dravid and Tendulkar, I don't see any complete and truly great player of fast bowling pitted against McGrath.
Marshall had to bowl to an Indian line-up which batted pretty deep too. Shastri was a better lower order batsman than any India have had since. Kapil Dev slaughtered the four-pronged West Indian attack in an away series, scoring at 60 runs/per innings in these four tests.
I somehow have great difficulty imagining an MSK Prasad, a Dhoni, a Parthiv Patel or an Irfan Pathan scoring 100* (95 balls) against Marshall, Roberts, Garner and Marshall on their home turf. That intimidation factor was missing from the Indian lower order that McGrath bowled to.
So coming back to my initial question, what made the Indian batting line-up of the 1995-2007 era much superior?
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