Not on this forum, it's been elevated to the point where it's now overrated tbh.Alright, let's take Rangana Herath as an equivalent to say people like Lyon or Kumble, he is seen on that level, as very good bowlers but not really stunning bowlers, on the same Lankan pitches, once his career properly started, Herath averaged insane numbers, destroying everyone bar India. and Yeah, Murali was amazing in England, I won't say he was insane in South Africa but had a great test and very good outside it, but regardless, I don't think even at his very peak he was quite on the level of an ATG pacer away from home. all said and done, I don't find the case for Murali in the top 5 convincing, and I'm pretty certain you also have the three pacers and Barnes above so I'm willing to drop the topic.
Yeah that's a tie breaker point mainly, they are all sensational bowlers but Marshall had the pace to make something of dry and dead wickets like in India in 82 I think? that's a supremely valuable skill for a fast bowler and that's what makes me rate Marshall above the other two, McGrath beats Hadlee on the basis of a large portion of his career taking place in a flat era and his home pitches being literal roads as I showed you, and then Hadlee.
as a Cricketer, I think Hadlee is the best, people underestimate the value of a good lower order batter, Australia might not have won the recent BGT had Pat Cummins not had the right tools at the right moment to support Labuschagne for example, Hadlee and Marshall are relatively close to me with Hadlee being a better bat comfortably and Marshall a better bowler with Hadlee edging it overall, McGrath respectfully behind the two as a Cricketer, proper #11.
Malcolm Marshall is number one for me but for me Richard Hadlee is just as good.though I'm just giving my personal view, I think I can confidently say Marshall is #1 for me, if people have McGrath, Hadlee or even Ambrose higher, cool.
Sachin is the best batsman after the Don.No because a) there isn't a Bradman outlier for bowlers and b) far more competition for top places in bats. A bat getting in the top three is equivalent to a top bowler position.
Did you see the overwhelming consensus of 90s and 2000s gen for McGrath tho in my recent thread? He can easily eclipse Marshall in a decade.I've never read an article, an interview, an anecdotal comment calling Hadlee the GOAT, I suspect neither have you.
I don't know why, but he has never been seen that way.
I think Sobers, Tendulkar, Hobbs and Viv are comparable Marshall and McGrath in terms of specialist skill.Malcolm Marshall is number one for me but for me Richard Hadlee is just as good.
Sachin is the best batsman after the Don.
Viv Richards & Gary Sobers are behind him.
Hobbs? I do not know even how to rate him.
I assume you mean on primary skill. Because Sobers is very clearly a better cricketer than the other 7.Tier 1 : Marshall, Hadlee, McGrath
Tier 1 : Sachin, Sobers, Viv, ?Hobbs, ?Hutton
All legends. Very little to separate them.
Duh.I assume you mean on primary skill. Because Sobers is very clearly a better cricketer than the other 7.
if he would have won more test matches for india, it would have been more impressive. dravid and laxman featured more in most famouse indian wins than sachin tells you all you need to know. he was a great accumulator of runs when it's easy to do so but when the going gets tough, he's in pavilion watching.Marshall definitely had more concentrated greatness in returns.
But Marshall had a shorter peak and career even compared to other ATGs.
He also faced IMO slightly worse opposition overall and had tremendous support which gave a slight boost to his stats.
For Tendulkar over 20 years to average 40 plus in and against a wider variety of teams IMO is more impressive.
Tendulkar has plenty of runs when the going is tough.if he would have won more test matches for india, it would have been more impressive. dravid and laxman featured more in most famouse indian wins than sachin tells you all you need to know. he was a great accumulator of runs when it's easy to do so but when the going gets tough, he's in pavilion watching.
Lol. You are arguing with him......Tendulkar has plenty of runs when the going is tough.
9 year peak of Sachin between 1993-2002 is basically equivalent to 6 year peak of Marshall between 1983-89. Marshall has way more match winning performances (undoubtedly helped by his team mates Roberts, Garner, Holding, Walsh etc.) though he was certainly the top dog. However, he did not stand out among his peers (Hadlee and Imran who did not even have the type of support that he had) like the way you project. Sachin had to face an avalanche of ATG bowlers during his peak (so did Waugh and Lara btw).I give Sachin longevity, but also believe that it's got to the point where it's seriously being overvalued. Marshall has almost 400 wickets, once you pass 300 you're golden as far as I'm concerned.
Does Bumrah even have half the wickets that Anderson has?
Don't think Sachin, or anyone not named Bradman beats Marshall on quality (re primary of course), he literally has the skill set, the rounded record, the adaptability.
Where I go next, and where I differ from everyone else here, and possibly because footballis my other team sport (and honestly the one I follow closest), is impact and winning. Marshall and McGrath are just unchallenged here as the primary players responsible for the sustained excellence of two dynasties.
Most will not agree, and that's fine.
Again, most value longevity, I value quality and impact.
If only Viv's peak was of similar length and had a 2nd peak, then sure.well I guess y'all have Viv>Marshall
His peak was arguably higher than any bowler peak other than Imran (bottlecap amplified) and he had a 17 year career as a regular rather than Marshall's 9.If only Viv's peak was of similar length and had a 2nd peak, then sure.
Viv's peak was 5 years, even less than Marshall. And even then he only had proper output in Tests in 3 years, heavily leaning towards a particular one and had a genuinely mid year. To have really have comparable peak with a pacer, Viv needed to do so for longer. Viv (and Smith) has the better 5 years peak, but SRT and Sobers have the 10 years ones.His peak was arguably higher than any bowler peak other than Imran (bottlecap amplified) and he had a 17 year career as a regular rather than Marshall's 9.
I include WSC when I make comments about Viv's peak, regardless Viv has a 5 year peak when he was averaging 10 points over genuine great ATG bats like Chappel and Gavaskar, immensely higher strike rate, Javed is a little padded due to not outs but regardless, with WSC Viv would've 4781 @ 65Viv's peak was 5 years, even less than Marshall. And even then he only had proper output in Tests in 3 years, heavily leaning towards a particular one and had a genuinely mid year. To have really have comparable peak with a pacer, Viv needed to do so for longer. Viv (and Smith) has the better 5 years peak, but SRT and Sobers have the 10 years ones.