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Shaun Pollock vs Courtney Walsh

Who was the greater test bowler?

  • Shaun Pollock

    Votes: 20 57.1%
  • Courtney Walsh

    Votes: 15 42.9%

  • Total voters
    35

subshakerz

Hall of Fame Member
This is a good one. Walsh served a similar role to Ambrose than Pollock did for Donald.

I am going with Pollock.

What makes this difficult is the late 30 or so tests of each of their careers. Walsh blossomed while Pollock faded.

However, before that, for the majority of their careers, Pollock was simply more consistently worldclass than Walsh, who I think was cushioned a bit for the 80s by being 3rd or 4th seamer a lot of the time while Marshall, Ambrose and Bishop doing much of the upfront damage.
 

BazBall21

International Captain
This is a good one. Walsh served a similar role to Ambrose than Pollock did for Donald.

I am going with Pollock.

What makes this difficult is the late 30 or so tests of each of their careers. Walsh blossomed while Pollock faded.

However, before that, for the majority of their careers, Pollock was simply more consistently worldclass than Walsh, who I think was cushioned a bit for the 80s by being 3rd or 4th seamer a lot of the time while Marshall, Ambrose and Bishop doing much of the upfront damage.
During the first half of his career Walsh was sub-3.5 WPM.
 

Slifer

International Captain
Kinda too close to call. Both played second fiddle top shelf bowlers. Both were outstanding everywhere but struggled vs Australia (Walsh in Australia). Both were particularly great in Asia. I'll probably give Pollock the edge because for much of the 90s, Pollock was on the same level more or less to the Mcgraths, Akrams and Ambroses. Walsh was slightly below that rung.
 

subshakerz

Hall of Fame Member
Each of them had two phases in their careers.

Pollock had his peak phase from debut to 2003, in which he took 310 wicket in 76 matches at 20.73. Quite amazing.
After that, he declined and took 111 wickets in his remaining 32 games at 30.


Walsh had his main part of his career from debut to 96/97, in which he had flashes of excellence but was largely bolstering Ambrose and the rest. He took 339 wickets in 93 games in this time at 26, basically Gillespie-esque.
Walsh late career peak began in 1997 in the famous series in Pakistan when they were whitewashed and Ambrose was hammered. He took 180 wickets in his remaining 39 games at 21, overtaking Ambrose as their lead bowler.


Based on the above, it is pretty clear Pollock was a more quality and lead bowler for a much longer stretch of their careers regardless how their overall stats look close.
 

subshakerz

Hall of Fame Member
Kinda too close to call. Both played second fiddle top shelf bowlers. Both were outstanding everywhere but struggled vs Australia (Walsh in Australia). Both were particularly great in Asia. I'll probably give Pollock the edge because for much of the 90s, Pollock was on the same level more or less to the Mcgraths, Akrams and Ambroses. Walsh was slightly below that rung.
I think based on stats and actual match performances, it is hard to say that Pollock played second fiddle to Donald. He frequently outshined him, especially in the subcontinent. Yes, Donald was widely perceived as a better bowler, but Pollock was taking 4 plus wickets a match at a lower average than him. It was more like Wasim and Waqar than McGrath and Gillespie.

Pollock gets underrated in CW as much as Kallis is overrated.
 
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Slifer

International Captain
I think based on stats and actual match performances, it is hard to say that Pollock played second fiddle to Donald. He frequently outshined him, especially in the subcontinent. Yes, Donald was widely perceived as a better bowler, but Pollock was taking 4 plus wickets a match at a lower average than him. It was more like Wasim and Waqar than McGrath and Gillespie.

Pollock gets underrated in CW as much as Kallis is overrated.
At the end of my post I did admit that Pollock was up there with the 90s bowlers but career wise, he comes in just below Donald and the other 90s greats : McGrath, Ambrose and Akran
 

subshakerz

Hall of Fame Member
At the end of my post I did admit that Pollock was up there with the 90s bowlers but career wise, he comes in just below Donald and the other 90s greats : McGrath, Ambrose and Akran
Yes agreed. But if he had retired in 2003 it would be an interesting question where he should be ranked.
 

ankitj

Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
I think based on stats and actual match performances, it is hard to say that Pollock played second fiddle to Donald. He frequently outshined him, especially in the subcontinent. Yes, Donald was widely perceived as a better bowler, but Pollock was taking 4 plus wickets a match at a lower average than him. It was more like Wasim and Waqar than McGrath and Gillespie.

Pollock gets underrated in CW as much as Kallis is overrated.
Yeah. Pollock was considered understudy to Donald probably for style, pace, aggression etc. But in that early phase of his career he was arguably more effective. 300+ wickets at >4 wpm at average better than Marshall's and most importantly picked top order wickets at rate similar to McGrath and Ambrose.
 

Slifer

International Captain
They are both adequately rated as great bowlers who weren't quite top tier. We don't need to suck every players dick pretending people didn't give them credit and how we're all so smart for recognizing their genius ffs.

Also ,Pollock was better because he didn't chuck.
That is absurd. Walsh didn't chuck either. Nor has he ever been called for it in his career.
 

ankitj

Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
They are both adequately rated as great bowlers who weren't quite top tier. We don't need to suck every players dick pretending people didn't give them credit and how we're all so smart for recognizing their genius ffs.
Underrated post.
 

Kenneth Viljoen

International Regular
Shaun Pollock was the better cricketer , it's something that can't be ignored even when limiting the debate to just the bowling , daylight in fielding ability and daylight in batting ability , the difference in bowling ability isn't great enough for me to say I'd pick Walsh over Pollock in a team cause Pollock can do the job Walsh can with the ball without a drop in quality.. For that reason I have to go with Pollock.
 

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