OverratedSanity
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Kagiso Rabada - On the surface, obscenely good stats that should make him a contender for one of the 10-15 best pacers ever. But the majority of times I've watched him bowl in the last 4 years or so, I've felt he's been very very lucky to come away with good figures. Also picks up a lot of weak low impact wickets (like in situations where match result is no longer in doubt). I feel like his legacy as a bowler is going to end up being divisive unless he goes back to having the impact he did earlier in his career.
Graeme Pollock - short career but clearly brilliant player, amazing fc stats, a few Question marks on ability to play a variety of attacks.
Greg Chappell- Brilliant player of fast bowling, but didn't go through the tough away tours his contemporaries did. As someone who values overall value in a career, overseas runs etc. he's a tough one to rank as highly as general consensus.
Steve Waugh - Amazing record against fast bowling during his peak, but batted lower down in a powerful lineup and the sheer number of not outs disgusts me as a filthy RPI believer. Also his lengthy early career struggles are completely ignored when they shouldn't.
Rahul Dravid - Somewhat mediocre record against the best attack, but the single best player of lateral movement I've seen and many iconic innings, often on really tough pitches (a rarity among the 2000s batting greats). Also had a quite prolonged slump in form in the second half of his career.
James Anderson - Aesthetically wonderful, improved in overseas conditions a lot as his career went on but the improvement also cane with reduced bowling workloads which limited his wicket output. But he's brute forced his way into the ATG conversation through unprecedented longevity.
Graeme Pollock - short career but clearly brilliant player, amazing fc stats, a few Question marks on ability to play a variety of attacks.
Greg Chappell- Brilliant player of fast bowling, but didn't go through the tough away tours his contemporaries did. As someone who values overall value in a career, overseas runs etc. he's a tough one to rank as highly as general consensus.
Steve Waugh - Amazing record against fast bowling during his peak, but batted lower down in a powerful lineup and the sheer number of not outs disgusts me as a filthy RPI believer. Also his lengthy early career struggles are completely ignored when they shouldn't.
Rahul Dravid - Somewhat mediocre record against the best attack, but the single best player of lateral movement I've seen and many iconic innings, often on really tough pitches (a rarity among the 2000s batting greats). Also had a quite prolonged slump in form in the second half of his career.
James Anderson - Aesthetically wonderful, improved in overseas conditions a lot as his career went on but the improvement also cane with reduced bowling workloads which limited his wicket output. But he's brute forced his way into the ATG conversation through unprecedented longevity.