Barnes the Colin Miller of his generation IMO, hair and all.
Now for something less tongue and cheek..
One thing which never sits that well with me regarding Barnes and his inclusion as one of the four best bowlers of all time in many peoples eyes is when you start to compare his record against the likes of Lohmann, Ferris, Turner, Peel and Briggs.
Yes Barnes took more wickets, but he played more Tests (apart from Briggs). His strike rate was superb, but not as good as Lohmann nor Ferris. His economy rate was one of the highest out of the half dozen bowlers I've mentioned too.
Also, I don't often really like factoring in first class records, but in that era it was more important compared to now and Barnes has a terrific first class career in terms of average but his average is inferior to four of the five other bowlers mentioned.
Sure there has been some written evidence suggesting Barnes was a difficult costumer to face and averages aren't everything or we'd be all saying Shoaib Akhtar is better than Shane Warne, but for me stats do become more important for players that I have never watched.
Basically, I'm a Barnes sceptic, I'm not against pre war era players or anything, I just think there are some holes in his record to out and out be the best bowler from those first 50 or so years of Test Cricket, which differs from Bradman and his batting.