mr_mister
Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
Wow, 35 lists submitted. A pretty big portion of regular CW members have chimed in here. We got well over 50 individual names, but I decided to make a requirement of each bowler needing to make at least 2 lists to qualify for this final countdown, so the list can stay at a reasonable size. It's already going to take ages, but oh well.
Using the cricinfo names for spin bowling styles we got:
16 Leg break googly bowlers
13 Right arm off spinners
and 14 Slow left arm orthodox bowlers
There was one bowler who occasionally bowled chinaman but his main discipline was orthodox so I've labelled him under that. Strange that there have been no ATG Chinaman bowlers in history. Was Michael Bevan the best at this craft? lol. Anyway I will be providing the rankings for each player within their bowling style as the list goes.
Will also be posting each player's Test WPM and their ranking of that within these 43 names. I originally planned to this for various categories such as averages, overall wickets etc but found they all tended to lean toward either modern or old era bowlers. For example aggregate records all leaned toward modern players while Econ and Averages were basically chronological lists, as the older players were heavily favoured. Also, WPM rankings aren't a very common/well documented statistical measurement so it might provide some new information for people.
Anyway without further adieu let's begin
#43. Iqbal Qasim, 3 points
Featured on 3 of 35 lists
Highest finish: 20th (3 times)
Ranking within spin discipline: 14th of 14 (Slow Left Arm Orthodox)
Test WPM ranking: 40th of 43 (3.42)
Qasim rounded out the bottom of 3 lists. It feels silly having him here as he scored less points than a few names who only featured on one list. Oh well, 3 people thought Qasim was worth a mention. A reliable man for Pakistan in the 80s, he wasn't too penetrative as shown by his low WPM. But he was seemingly great at tying up an end, with an a terrific economy rate of just 2.2, which helped his average stay under 30. Like a lot of spinners he was more effective at home than away, averaging 25 compared to 33. There's not much more to say about this guy as I must admit I barely recognised the name when he was placed on lists.
Using the cricinfo names for spin bowling styles we got:
16 Leg break googly bowlers
13 Right arm off spinners
and 14 Slow left arm orthodox bowlers
There was one bowler who occasionally bowled chinaman but his main discipline was orthodox so I've labelled him under that. Strange that there have been no ATG Chinaman bowlers in history. Was Michael Bevan the best at this craft? lol. Anyway I will be providing the rankings for each player within their bowling style as the list goes.
Will also be posting each player's Test WPM and their ranking of that within these 43 names. I originally planned to this for various categories such as averages, overall wickets etc but found they all tended to lean toward either modern or old era bowlers. For example aggregate records all leaned toward modern players while Econ and Averages were basically chronological lists, as the older players were heavily favoured. Also, WPM rankings aren't a very common/well documented statistical measurement so it might provide some new information for people.
Anyway without further adieu let's begin
#43. Iqbal Qasim, 3 points
Featured on 3 of 35 lists
Highest finish: 20th (3 times)
Ranking within spin discipline: 14th of 14 (Slow Left Arm Orthodox)
Test WPM ranking: 40th of 43 (3.42)
Qasim rounded out the bottom of 3 lists. It feels silly having him here as he scored less points than a few names who only featured on one list. Oh well, 3 people thought Qasim was worth a mention. A reliable man for Pakistan in the 80s, he wasn't too penetrative as shown by his low WPM. But he was seemingly great at tying up an end, with an a terrific economy rate of just 2.2, which helped his average stay under 30. Like a lot of spinners he was more effective at home than away, averaging 25 compared to 33. There's not much more to say about this guy as I must admit I barely recognised the name when he was placed on lists.
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