Every time I read your posts I feel you cannot be any more biased than this but you keep surprising me.
Going by your post 2010's side would be one of the fav's to win this one because the stocks in Indian cricket for pace bowlers has never been this good and 'as per your logic' Indian fans would only have begun appreciating pace bowlers (more than ever) in the last decade.
If there is anything to take out of the voting here I feel Bradman is being overrated more than the 80s side. Bradman's 30s side barely managed to win against the 50s side by one vote (against an attack of Davidson, Trueman and Co).
And if you observe the ATG sides picked here regularly Hadlee and Marshall are more prominently present in these ATG sides as compared to 50s bowlers.
And if you consider Bradman to be equivalent of 2 ATGs, his side is so well equipped with top quality batsmen that they should negate the opposition bowling pretty easily. But the votes say otherwise.
Way to misrepresent what I've said.
And arguing that people voting for a side proves anything except that a majority of the people who voted think that way is a logical fallacy.
I noted that most Indian voters had gone with the 80s side. The strength of the 80s side is its pace attack. I proposed an idea that maybe Indians are over rating the 80s side because of the changes in recent times to their side (which has gained some top quality pace bowlers and who have seen excellent results because of it). It would be no different from Australians suddenly valuing spin much more highly in the 90s/00s than they had before. It was an idea, no more.
On the other part of the debate - Bradman. I do think people underrate how good Bradman was because we haven't seen anything like it. Bradman averaged 50% more runs than Steve Smith. Smith has been mind blowing. Bradman was way better than him. We can't truly comprehend how good he was because we don't really believe it. We don't believe it because we have no Anchor for our brains to work with. Bradman was as much better than Kane Williamson as Kane Williamson is to Pat Cummins.
Let's just look, for example, at the 1936/37 series, which by Bradman's standards was an average one.
In that series he made:
38, 0, 0, 82, 13, 270, 26, 212 and 169.
That was an average series for him. He "only" averaged 90 that series. That's akin to your average series being Michael Clarke 2012 level. It's unbelievable.
Basically, to say that Bradman would have averaged 60 today, you need to be saying that the best of the rest would be averaging around 30 today. Do we really believe that Hobbs would have averaged less than Travis Head?
Bradman might have "only" averaged 80 vs the 80s attack, but he's also wearing out the opposing quick bowlers, ensuring the middle order faces a softer ball and piling up massive totals. He was ridiculous and is banned from drafts because any side with him in is basically going to win unless there's a heavy, one sided advantage given to the opposing sides.
A bowling example would be like if every bowler was at Srinath level and one bowler was Marshall.