It seems to me that all the people challenging the "Ball of the Century" status on the grounds of there being "better" or "more unplayable" balls (especially balls delivered by Warne later in his career) are missing the point. The ball's status, and yes one can argue that it is in part an Anglo(/Aussie?) centric view, comes as much from the circumstances which it was delivered as its unplayable qualities (it obviously wasn't unplayable in principle - for a start it ultimately pitched outside leg so could have been kicked away).
Whether you think Gatting was a good player of spin or not, is to some extent not important - at the time he had a reputation for being so (especially against "leg spin"), but he had never faced anyone like Warne. But that is again the point - not only had he never faced anyone like Warne, many people in England (including many of the journalists who reported the event) had simply never seen anything like Warne. We had all heard a little bit of him - someone who turned the ball a bit and had won a couple of tests for Australia, but we hadn't seen him, nor anything like. (it wasn't like today where most foreign test series are routinely broadcast on Sky Sports). All we knew was that he'd turned up in England and Graeme Hick had murdered him in the match against Worcester (we know now that he was deliberately holding most of his variations back in that match, but that wasn't revealed at the time).
And then he came on to bowl at Old Trafford and for many of us our entire view of what was possible on a cricket field changed. Frankly it is not totally ridiculous that it would have been considered by many in England to have been a pretty astonishing ball if it had missed the off-stump!
So better balls? Possibly. More unplayable balls? Definitely. More significant balls? Can't think of many.
Whether you think Gatting was a good player of spin or not, is to some extent not important - at the time he had a reputation for being so (especially against "leg spin"), but he had never faced anyone like Warne. But that is again the point - not only had he never faced anyone like Warne, many people in England (including many of the journalists who reported the event) had simply never seen anything like Warne. We had all heard a little bit of him - someone who turned the ball a bit and had won a couple of tests for Australia, but we hadn't seen him, nor anything like. (it wasn't like today where most foreign test series are routinely broadcast on Sky Sports). All we knew was that he'd turned up in England and Graeme Hick had murdered him in the match against Worcester (we know now that he was deliberately holding most of his variations back in that match, but that wasn't revealed at the time).
And then he came on to bowl at Old Trafford and for many of us our entire view of what was possible on a cricket field changed. Frankly it is not totally ridiculous that it would have been considered by many in England to have been a pretty astonishing ball if it had missed the off-stump!
So better balls? Possibly. More unplayable balls? Definitely. More significant balls? Can't think of many.