At the start of Hobbs' career the hardest challenge for batsmen was the new googly bowling. It was dubbed the most significant innovation since overarm and literally created panic. Predictably the first man to master it was Trumper, followed by Hobbs then Jack Hearne.
Vogler was considered by many English observers to be the best bowler in the world, certainly on matting. Hordern, as noted here, was high-class. Johnny Moyes said he was as good as O'Reilly and superior to Mailey, Grimmett and Benaud. When one or other was in the opposition Hobbs averaged 75 in Tests. He also faced plenty of Tibby Cotter who Warner reckoned to be as fast as anybody apart from Larwood and Kortright.
Hutton considered his own peak occurred in 1939, the year war broke out. Similarly Hobbs may well have been at his best in 1914. Following a successful tour of South Africa against the hosts' matting specialists, his knocks in England included 174 runs in 150 minutes across two innings of a match against Yorkshire (Hirst and Rhodes), 183 in 170 minutes in the next game against Warwickshire (FR Foster), 215 in 240 minutes against Essex with the next highest score 27 (Johnny Douglas – the bowler Hobbs surprisingly said he found most difficult of all), and 226 in 260 minutes against Notts.
Among his best post-war Test efforts were 123 off 155 balls in the fourth innings at Adelaide in 1921 against Gregory, McDonald and Mailey, 100 on a rain-damaged surface at The Oval in 1926 to win the Ashes (as recently mentioned here), and 49 at Melbourne on a really vicious pitch in 1928-29 when England successfully chased 332 to win. In the last two of these matches, Sutcliffe also batted with great skill. Unlike many other English batsmen, Hobbs never had any trouble with Gregory's pace and intimidation.
Hobbs' last first-class century was against county champions Lancashire at the age of 51. It was the only hundred scored against Lancashire in the championship that year.
With regards to Lara, could anyone else have broken the records for both highest Test and first-class innings within a couple of months, then broken the Test record again ten years later? After Hutton's 364 in 1938, Bradman's highest score in first-class cricket was 267.