subshakerz
Hall of Fame Member
By the time Marshall came as a regular in 83, they were already the top team ever. That dominance began in 79/80. Marshall only carried that forward.They weren't the best team in history, don't think that occured till the mid '80's and by then Lloyd, Roberts etc had retired, Viv and Greenidge was on the decline, Holding was oft injured and heading for retirement. The only.reasin they maintained that level was because of him. You can choose to believe it or not. Matters no to me.
Except you didn't earlier in Ambroses case. It had to be pounded into you.Re Ambrose, he had a wrecked shoulder and he wasn't less effective, but yes, less destructive, doesn't take away from what he did or effect his standing... Unlike you I can accept that players had deficits.
The problem is how harsh you are for Imran averaging a few points higher here or there and look over the context of his series, and ignore half of his career on flat pitches, yet give all these favors to Steyn even those he has notably higher averages. Double standards.Re Steyn and Imran, you totally ignore context.
Imran played in an era where Hadlee, and Marshall and before then Lillee was successful away from home, and Lillee for example is criticized for only playing on helpful surfaces. Australia were always a challenge, but everyone else had decent records there, India too wasn't a walk over in the 70's or early 80's but Marshall managed to do well as well. England was a bowlers paradise and the Caribbean had a mixed bag but it's share of helpful surfaces.
Steyn played in an era of flat ass pitches where mostly everyone struggled on them.
Imran, helpful era when his contemporaries out outperformed him in most of not all locales, Steyn, least helpful era since the '30's and '40's and outperformed his contemporaries.
Yes there's a reason why one performed better at home than away, what's the reason for the other?
How are these things not glaring obvious.
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