When spinners are mentioned there are three which separate themselves from the pack; Warne, Muralitharan and O'Reilly. When fast bowlers are mentioned there are only four who contends for the title of the best ever; Marshall, McGrath, Barnes and Lillee. That leaves me with three available spots and it's a close call but I go with Ambrose and Trueman and the competition for the third spot is wide open and Steyn will probably be there before his career is finished, so may just put him there now ahead of Holding, Hadlee, Donald and Imran.
01. Malcolm Marshall
02. Glenn McGrath
03. Syd Barnes
04. Dennis Lillee
T5. Shane Warne
T5. Muttiah Muralitharan
07. Curtly Ambrose
08. William O'Reilly
09. Fred Trueman
10. Dale Steyn
With regards for who was the best. Only one bowler had every tool in the book (searing pace, swing, bounce, cutters, seam) and knew when and where to use them. He performed everywhere the world over and dominated and was equally brilliant both home and away. He averaged less than 25 in all countries vs all opponents and finished his career with an average under 21 and a s/r under 48 while picking up over 4.5 wpm while competing for wickets.
He also put his team on his back and despite retirements (Lloyd, Holding, Robers) and decline of key players (Viv and Greenidge) never lost a series and in his prime as an opening bowler lost all of three tests*.
*Can't pull up stat guru, so going from memory[/QUOTE]
Two thumbs up !!!