I few weeks back I was watching a fairly old documentary on YouTube about Viv. And while everyone loved Viv and his "swagger etc" most around the world were not fans of the West Indies quicks. I had actually forgotten how borderline disliked they were.
Benaud in his ATG series didn't include any if them in his top 6 selections and that didn't even include Imran or Hadlee who I believe he had grouped in his all rounder selections.. Though it must be said that he did throughout the interview and reveal acknowledge that it wasn't necessarily the best team, but the one that he would want to represent him. As evidenced by his spinner, fast bowler and wicket keeper shortlists.
Many though that what we did was almost unfair, borderline cheating, unsporting and against the spirit of the game, though no one thought that when Lillee and Thompson were doing their thing, but hypocrisy is a thing.
I've seen books where it almost described us as brutish, but The 2 Ws were artists and Warne a magician who changed the game.
But to also respond to some of the other comments. There's no doubt that Maco was the best of the WI quicks of the late '70's and the 80's. And it had nothing to do with stat guru or spreadsheets. By '84 he was faster and more consistent and reliable than Holding, had more five wicket hauls and a greater impact than Garner and Ambrose never had his versatility or toolkit.
I'll go as far as to say that when he did retire, not only was the best quick from the Caribbean, but the best the world produced.
His impact, he was the one who propelled us to one of the 3 greatest teams of all time.
His resume and all round record everywhere, he dominated in India when some didn't think it was possible.
And the unmatched toolkit that he possessed. As the quote says, "he had all of the tools, and knew when and how to use them"
But don't just read or look at numbers, YouTube is a treasure trove.