Cricketweb Australia All Time XI
Victor Trumper
Arthur Morris
Sir Donald Bradman *
Greg Chappell
Allan Border
Keith Miller
Adam Gilchrist +
Shane Warne
Dennis Lillee
Bill O'Reilly
Glenn Mcgrath
Ricky Ponting
Allan Davidson
Cricketweb West Indies All Time XI
Gordon Greenidge
Sir Conrad Hunte
George Headley *
Sir I.V.A. Richards
Brian Lara
Sir Garfield Sobers
Sir Clyde Walcott +
Malcolm Marshall
Michael Holding
Curtly Ambrose
Joel Garner
Frank Worrell
Lance Gibbs
Cricketweb England All Time XI
Sir Jack Hobbs
Sir Len Hutton *
Wally Hammond
Ken Barrington
Denis Compton
Sir Ian Botham
Allan Knott +
Jim Laker
Harold Larwood
Fred Trueman
Syd Barnes
Hedley Verity
Kevin Pietersen
Cricketweb South Africa All Time XI
Barry Richards
Graeme Smith *
Jacques Kallis
Graeme Pollock
Dudley Nourse
Aubrey Faulkner
Mike Procter
John Waite +
Dale Steyn
Hugh Tayfield
Allan Donald
Shaun Pollock
Herbie Taylor
Cricketweb Pakistan All Time XI
Hanif Mohammad
Saeed Anwar
Younis Khan
Javed Miandad
Inzamam-ul-Haq
Mushtaq Mohammad
Imran Khan *
Rashid Latif +
Wasim Akram
Fazal Mahmood
Waqar Younis
Mohammad Yousuf
Saqlain Mushtaq
I think that really, you can't split the Australian, English, WIs and South African teams. It's very difficult to do so.
Australia has the obvious advantage of Bradman. Two attacking openers (a L/R combo). The artistry of Chappell, the determination and skill of Border (LH), Miller and Gilchrist (LH) as attacking weapons with the bat. Brilliant bowling combo, with Lillee, McGrath and Miller to bowl pace and O'Reilly and Warne. In the field they have Chappell, Miller and Border who were all excellent in the cordon (as well as Warne who was decent), and Bradman was a very good cover fields-man.
What sets them apart from the rest?
- Bradman
- High quality spin bowling unit. O'Reilly and Warne would cause serious problems bowling in tandem on day 4 and 5.
England has two very strong opening batsmen (the fact that Sutcliffe missed out attests to this). Hammond, Barrington and Compton in the middle order provide a lot of variety, and skill. Lacking a left handed player in the top 7, which is a shame. Botham capable of shredding a bowling attack with the bat, and Knott is very handy with the willow also. Bowling attack is led by Trueman and Larwood, with Barnes and Laker as spin partners. Botham is the all rounder here, with a knack of picking up vital wickets. Criticism has been levelled at having Botham at 6, with most thinking he is one spot too high for an ATG team. I think it works best for this team to have him there with Knott very capable at 7. In the field Hammond and Botham are both excellent slippers, and Hobbs was a very good cover field. Knott an exceptional keeper.
What sets them apart from the rest?
- Best opening batsmen of all the teams
- Botham is a real x-factor. In a series, he might win two matches almost single-handedly.
- SF Barnes and Laker could be a real handful on the right wicket.
West Indies is a strong team, as you'd expect. Greenidge and Hunte aggressive at the top, and then the middle order is as good as any, and maybe better than the rest as a whole. Headley, Richards, Lara and Sobers, along with Walcott, are a nightmare for the opposition bowlers. Combination of left and right handed aggressive technicians, highly skilled and intimidating. The bowling attack is what is expected- tall, fast and accurate. Four quicks was their modus operandi during the 80s, and it brought them much success. However, with Sobers in the team as a left arm quick, I think there's room for Gibbs as a spinner. As a fielding unit they are excellent, with Viv, Lara, Sobers and Greenidge all good in the cordon, and elsewhere.
What sets them apart from the rest?
- The middle order. Dynamic, powerful and intimidating.
- Four quicks, plus Sobers. On a green wicket, they would be a handful.
South Africa. What is it with South Africa and all-rounders? They seem to produce them at will. Procter, Faulkner and Kallis all front up here. As a batting unit, these guys are special. Richards is spoken of almost reverentially as a batsman by guys like Bradman and Ian Chappell. Smith is ugly, but effective. Kallis is all class, and the guy following him at 4 is even better, a true genius. Nourse was a brilliant batsman capable of holding it all together, while Faulkner, Procter and Waite form a potent middle-lower order. As a bowling unit this team is impressive. Donald and Steyn are similar in many ways, both quick, skilled and nasty. Procter is spoken of very highly as a quick bowler, and Kallis provides excellent support. Tayfield and Faulkner provide a nice spin combo, contrasting each other. Most SAs tend to be good fieldsmen, good in the slips and in the outfield. Richards, Pollock, Kallis and Smith all excellent slippers.
What sets them apart from the rest?
- Three high quality all rounders. They would all walk in to most test teams in history on the basis of either their batting OR their bowling.