Hadlee is as good as Miller and Gilchrist and Sangakarra also deserve a mention.Bradman
Daylight
Sobers
Imran
Miller
Hadlee/Tendulkar/Warne/McGrath/Marshall/Muralidaran/Hobbs/Hutton
Gilchrist does deserve a mention. Was in two minds regarding Hadlee. No to Sanga. I would rather include Steyn and Gavaskar if I had to.. which I may on another day.Hadlee is as good as Miller and Gilchrist and Sangakarra also deserve a mention.
I know.Used to have him as no.2 earlier,have changed it a bit since with Sobers moving at no.2 as of now ahead of Grace.Including Grace but not as #1 or #2 is a bit odd
Excellent. The WI record is a serious clincher for me too.It is very close between Imran, Steyn, Ambrose. While I feel Steyn and Imran were better tested across conditions, and Ambrose was not that tested in SC, he was good everywhere he bowled and he is leagues ahead of Imran and Steyn in Aus and even somewhat clearly better in Eng. Steyn perhaps had the best bowling conditions at home, and the argument for him bowling in a batting friendly era is somewhat neutralised by the fact that he didn’t do that well in Aus and Eng, where the tracks had become flatter. I choose Imran by a smidgeon due to him having the best short term bowling peak ever, and his ATG performance against the greatest test side of all time(80 wickets@21)
Imran in the 1980 decade played 16 test series. He was man of the series in half of those.On paper and without scrutiny or objective review Imran should for all rights and purpose be a top three player of all time.
The fact that he isn't should pose questions.
Bradman (duh), then clearly Sobers. Imran a great shout for 3, and gets it for his exceptional leadership and influence for mine. But he's far closer to the pack than Sobers, imo.On paper and without scrutiny or objective review Imran should for all rights and purpose be a top three player of all time.
The fact that he isn't should pose questions.
The casual 44–19. Mindboggling, yeah.Wow didn't realize this about his player of the series awards. As @ataraxia said once, you don't realize how good Imran's record was until you actually see it. I still keep learning facts that blow my mind.
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You did like this post in the same thread btwI am not sure if cricket will see a cricketer like Imran in the 1980s, once he emerged from WSC.
From his first major all-round series against WI in 1980/81, he had a sequence of being man of the series 8 times in 18 series until retirement.
That included four MOS awards on the trot in Pakistan, India, England and WI. In fact, he likely would have had six on the trot but rain stopped the 1988 series in NZ in which he performed from fully completing.
He has three MOS awards against WI, including at their peak in 80/81. Unlike Kallis' bowling, he has two MOS based purely on his batting performances against India. Most impressively, in this time, he never had a series when he collectively failed with bat and ball. He was the ultimate performer.