6th. Sydney Barnes (416 points)
Top 5 finishes: 9
Bottom 5 finishes: 0
Highest finish: 1st (2 times)
Lowest finish: 19th (1 time)
A difficult bowler to rank due to the era he played in, but indisputably one of the best ever. From everything I've read, he'd be my personal number 1. Debate raged over whether he should be included in the pace or spin category(as he used both skills in his bowling) but I think pace was the right choice. Definitely not 'quick' but I think he was likely a medium pacer. One of the first bowlers to apparently use the seam to his benefit, he also perfected swing and fast breaks to rank as the highest pre WW2 bowler on this list, in fact the highest on this list from before 1970. Also the highest ranked Englishman. Many people have talked about the magic he could produce with ball in hand so I'll delve into his stats a bit.
He has the best bowling average of any test bowler from 1900 onwards, when batsman started to actually put up a real fight against bowlers(and players such as Hobbs, Trumper and Macartney came onto the scene). Before 1900 bowling averages were very low and your test order was full of bats who averaged under 35 so I think the 1900 cut-off is an important one. Still his average of 16.5 is 6th on the all time list.
He took 189 wickets in only 27 tests, which means he averaged exactly 7 wickets per test. This is quite insane and I think the clear cut record, even better than Lohmann. He didn't even have a monopoly over the wickets like say a Hadlee, as the great Colin Blythe played in many tests alongside him. His average against top opposition Australia(featuring Trumper, Hill and McCartney) was 21, terrific but not outrageous for ATG pacemen.
However he absolutely thrived against newly formed test nation South Africa, taking 83 scalps from 7 tests at an average of 9. Now that is crazy. It includes a world record high 49 test wicket series against them, and he actually missed a test so it could have been even more. Still this record has stood for over 100 years and I can't see it ever being beaten. He is yet another former world record holder for test wickets on this list. He actually holds the record for longest reign as the king, holding the test aggregate record for 21 years from 1914-1935.
Barnes seemed a mysterious figure who always bowled with a cap on and played FC cricket right up until he was 57.