If you have a problem with it, then demonstrate why you believe such views are false. Basing your justifications on opinions or views expressed by others is a very lazy way of attempting to argue your point.
Fair enough. I'll try to break down my thoughts on each player and why I rate Gerrard higher than them or at least comparable.
Keane had the brute strength, mentality and short passing game to dictate a game in the middle, but apart from the occasional goal was not a constant threat at the other end of the pitch. In terms of 1v1 duels in the middle he was very adept at overawing his opposing number. But ask him to carry a weaker side without much of an attack and he'll come up short. He just doesn't have the game to do it. He was one of the last of the old school midfielders - the Souness type - and I generally think the game in England is much more technical now than it was then which is why I rate Gerrard, Scholes and Lampard higher when reflecting about that.
Scholes has great vision, great movement and awareness, and the ability to read the game on both ends of the pitch. He is a bit more adaptable and earlier in his career played high up the pitch and scored a lot of goals. But other than through the middle, you wouldn't play him elsewhere because he didn't have the physical attributes to beat players or to defend. His game is cerebral and it has translated into a long career because of it. He's probably better placed in the modern game of possession football than the past where getting by without physicality was tougher because of the nature of the game and interpretation of the rules.
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Lampard was the best in terms of consistent output of them all in terms of goals and assists. His late runs, clever movements and freak lung-capacity made him a very hard player to mark but it has also meant he has been less involved in dictating the way his team played. That's probably why people perceive Lampard as the lesser of these midfielders despite his awesome stats; he could be anonymous and then pop up with a goal or an assist. He's also a player you wouldn't ask to play very deeply nor wide. I don't think his running with the ball is good enough to play just behind the striker; he generally relies on passing and moving into space which there is less of the closer you get to the opponent's goal. I think that's the draw-back with Lampard; his game is wonderful for the position he has played and the teammates he has had, but he is the least adaptable player of them all.
Vieira in style was more similar to Gerrard in that he seemed to be as involved in his own half as he was in the oppositions. He had better vision in terms of going forward than Keane, even though Keane tended to pop up with more goals. I think he was also more adaptable as he had the physical attributes to play wider if need be and could drive well with the ball at his feet. He, with Keane, dominated the period until around Gerrard emerged but I generally rate him and Keane less because the league didn't have the same quality back then. It was really from mid-2000 that English football came back and the league got to be the best in the world again.
Gerrard was all of them in one. He had the lungs and goal-threat of Lampard, the ability to play the physical game like Keane, the vision to pick out passes like Scholes, and consistently had notable affect on both areas of the pitch in the same game like Vieira. They may have been better than him at the thing they were great at, but he wasn't far behind them in those facets and he had all of them. Any position he was asked to play, he did it, and was the best or one of the best in it. I've never seen a player play all over midfield to such a high standard as Gerrard. In any league or at any time.
More than just the technical and physical ability he had, he could lift a team on his own through sheer will far more consistently than the aforementioned who were usually surrounded by the best the league had to offer. When he drove forward with purpose, it seemed like a juggernaut and the rest of the team would hop on board for the ride. I think the fact that he has scored so many long range wonder goals is somewhat symbolic - he's had to do it on his own, often with no build up play or help, scoring the kind of goal that didn't need his teammates to do anything. I do think often Gerrard the saviour role is overplayed - earlier in his career his team was very good IMO and for a couple years when we had Mascherano and Alonso he also had the tools to properly challenge. It's no coincidence that his best years in the league came with those teams.
But there is no doubt he has carried the team through seasons - in a way none of the others had to do. He also stepped up far more often than sometimes you would believe. What makes him incredible IMO is he did it when it counted, especially in the big games or the finals. He is comic book superhero material. I'm a Liverpool fan, so I am biased, but if you had this kind of player how could you not be? Gerrard's influence on the club and his team is so deep that despite the lack of league titles a lot of Liverpool fans - notable or not - consider him on par or better than many players who won pretty much everything there was to win at club level - e.g. Kenny, Souness, Keegan, etc.