In this exercise Cardus referred to Bosanquet as an "unfulfilled pioneer" and put King in the same bracket. Cardus was a Lancashire supporter and a fan of Johnny Tyldesley whom he knew well. He named quite a few others who missed out, including Macartney, but not Hammond or Headley.I think for some reason did he rated Hammond and Headley lower than other critics?? I am asking this as those two not only missed to be in his "6 Giants of the Wisden Century" in 1963; but they also missed out on the 12 man shortlist; which Johnny Tyldesly, Bart King and even Bernard Bosenquet made.
When Bradman retired in 1949, there was a debate about whether he was the greatest-ever batsman. Far more of a debate than there is today. Some thought he was what we would now call a flat track bully. Those arguing against Bradman named five batsmen they thought were at least his equal. Not everyone named all five but they were Grace, Ranji, Trumper, Hobbs and Macartney. All were attacking players in their youth, adept on difficult pitches.
Where Macartney differed from the others was that he always played the same way, rather than slowing down with age. In first-class cricket in England, he scored 10% faster than Bradman, 20% faster than Hammond, and nearly 60% faster than Headley. It was the type of batting, with shots all round the wicket, that went down very well with writers and spectators of the time.
Taking opinions across the spectrum around 1950, Macartney was probably rated about equal with Hammond and above Headley. Now he is largely forgotten and ranked below both.