My list will be quite different to everybody else's...
1. Shane Warne
I can't be bothered writing too much about Warne.
2. Dennis Lillee
If we took what the cricket experts said about Lillee seriously, then there'd be almost no contest that Dennis Lillee is the best fast bowler ever. That's what Benaud, Dickie Bird, Richard Hadlee, Ian Botham, Bob Willis, Alan Border, and many others have said about him. I wish I could drudge up my old posts about Lillee and repost some of the ways I defended Lillee. I can't understand why he isn't move loved at CW.
If I had to say one thing especially about Lillee, it's that people really underestimate how much Australia relied on him. Take Richard Hadlee. People talk about how he carried New Zealand - but Lillee bowled more overs and spells per match than Hadlee. He was asked to carry Australia more, I would argue, than Hadlee carried New Zealand. Look at how much Lillee bowled in the '81 Ashes, and the wickets he took.
Honestly, people who compare Lillee to McGrath need to consider two things:
1) Lillee bowled more overs per match. He was asked to shoulder more responsibility.
2) Lillee got more wickets per Test than McGrath. People will talk about how McGrath, who average 4.5 wickets per Test, isn't far behind a man who averaged 5.1 wickets per Test. But to me, getting more wickets per Test is more important than having a bowling average that's 2-3 runs better (McGrath averages just over 21, Lillee just under 24).
Some will point to his sub-par record on the sub-continent. I don't think he played enough there to judge. The fact that Lillee is most famous for bowling his best on the MCG, during a period when the MCG was known for not being a fast bowlers wicket, says enough for me. Most commentators note Lillee performed better at the unresponsive MCG than at the fast-paced WACA.
3. Malcolm Marshall
The first bowler on my list with a pretty much perfect record against everybody. Marshall can't really help the fact that being in a strong side helped him a lot.
4. Muttiah Muralitharan
The best long marathon-spell bowler of all time. His figures probably never will be beaten. I'd have him in my all-time side.
I have a few tiny criticisms of Murali. First, while he was one of the all-time greats, his figures do flatter him. For example, I saw many Tests where he took wickets after the Tests were lost. The recent SA v AUS Test is a good example. Steyn didn't have a great Test, but he chimed in at the right time and took about 4-70, despite taking those wickets after Australia had the ascendancy. Murali could be 0-100 one instant, Test over, and then take 5-130, which is incredible. His stats overstate the impact he had on Tests. That said, the mere fact he got the wickets says something about how great he is.
My other tiny criticism is that I don't think he was as great a big-match performer as most people on my top 10. Oh, and he performed bad against Australia. And yes, that old chestnut that he took nearly 200 wickets against Zimbabwe and Bangladesh... well it flatters him, a bit...
5. S.F. Barnes
I used to be in that camp that said, "Barnes played in an era before cricketers were good, etc." I doubt Barnes would have the figures he had if he bowled in modern times. But at the same time, he's so incredible ahead of everybody else in his era, that nobody comes close to him. Maybe he wouldn't be great in modern times, but this is going on legacy, partly.
6. Sir Richard Hadlee
I hate New Zealanders, so I didn't want to put Hadlee on this Test. I put Hadlee above McGrath because he had to carry his side more than McGrath. His legacy is impressive - a win against the almighty West Indies, and a home and away series win against the Aussies. Many of these were Hadlee's best-ever performances, too. He's by far NZ's greatest cricketer. Pity I don't like him.
7. Glenn McGrath
- I really find McGrath to be the most overrated player on these boards. If there was one cricketer who's figures are better than his impact, it's him. I recall while his figures were magnificent in the mid to late 90s, men like Walsh, Ambrose, Donald, and even Pollock, were regularly regarded as better than him. McGrath's figures belie his impact. If you saw him then, nobody thought he was the world's best bowler until about 1999.
That's true for me. For me, McGrath was the world's best bowler in 1999 in the West Indies, and from 1999-2001 he eclipsed an out-of-form Warne. The period between Perth 2004 until he stepped on that cricket ball at Edgebaston was the best period of his career. If that's the McGrath you remember, and you think he was that good all his career, well I'd argue he wasn't that good until around 1999.
Also, it has to be said McGrath broke even with Lara and Tendulkar.
It's interesting that Benaud and Chappell think Ray Lindwall was better than McGrath...
7. Curtley Ambrose
Can't be stuffed writing about him.
8. Wasim Akram
For pure entertainment, I'd take Akram over someone like McGrath. I like what Tim de Lisle once said about him - with Pollock and McGrath you had line and length, but Akram could take a wicket without the keeper. His swing was incredible.
9. Bill O'Rielly
The man Bradman said was the best bowler ever. His figures, strike-rate, everything are immaculate. He compares favourably against any bowler, statistically, throughout history. I'd have him and Warne in my all-time Aussie side - yes two leg-spinners. People really need to look at his stats and see how impressive he is. More than five wickets per Test, at under 23...
10. Fred Trueman
Ah back when taking 300 wickets made you immortal... Hopefully people don't forget how incredible that was back in his day. Honestly, I'm thinking I should put Trueman higher than this. I think in a different age, with more competition to play, he could be in most people's top fives. Benaud rates him about the second best bowler he ever saw.