#21st. Stuart MacGill, 115 points
Featured on 20 of 35 lists
Highest finish: 5th (1 time)
Ranking within spin discipline: 8th of 16 (Leg Break Googly)
Test WPM ranking: 10th of 43 (4.73)
SCG MacGill. When I first started watching cricket during the '98/99 Ashes MacGill was the first bowler I really saw dismantle a team, taking match figures of 12/107 in Sydney including a very ***y 7/50 in the second innings. His action to me was more fun to replicate than Warnes, with the big left hand being held out as he ran in and then a classical action that followed. He always came with a neat haircut and ball polishing towel hanging from his trousers.
He took 208 wickets in his 44 test career and as we all know it could have been a lot more. Despite a very impressive strike-rate of 54(I think the best of any post-war spinner before Ashwin recently came along) and nearly 5 wickets per test, MacGill often struggled to make the test side. That is of course due to Shane Warne existing, and in many overseas tours MacGill was snubbed of the chance to play more test cricket. He never got to play a single test in spin-friendly India or in England, the latter of which he had a great record against playing at home. That must have killed him. Australia simply preferred to play 3 quicks and a spinner except on a few rare occasions, mainly Sydney tests and the Windies tour of '99 when MacGill simply couldn't be dropped for a returning Warne after his ashes domination earlier in the year. There he famously kept Warne out of the side for the final match.
His bowling average comes in around 29 despite the awesome S/R and WPM and this is in big part due to MacGill's style. Like Mailey of old MacGill was more than happy to give away a boundary ball an over and he was always tossing it up and asking the batsman to play shots. An old school leggie. Equipped with enormous turn of the ball and a better wrong'un than Warne, MacGill generally took a bag of wickets whenever he played, sometimes outperforming Warne in the tests they both featured in. He took 12 five fers in just 44 tests and although it's been said here recently that he only got to play on spin suited pitches, he winded up playing a fair bit of cricket on the other less helpful wickets of Australia. 20 of his 27 home tests came at grounds other than the SCG, this number beefed up due to a few Warne injuries and a one year drug ban. So MacGill certainly got his fair crack at home and generally excelled.
He ranks in this exercise as the 8th best leggie of all time yet he had to fight for selection with who many consider to be the best leggie of all time. If he was born in England, hell if he was simply born ten years earlier or later he'd have played 100+ tests. Unlucky but still a legend.