Vic Richardson
01. Bill Woodfull c
02. Cyril Walters
03. Charlie Barnett 7
04. Stan McCabe 4
05. Vic Richardson
06. Keith Miller 1
07. Les Ames (wk)
08. Colin McCool 6
09. Laurie Nash 3
10. Herman Griffith 2
11. Chuck Fleetwood-Smith 5
Top 3: Woodfull needs no introduction. He was one of the best openers of the Bradman era and averaged a staggering 65 in 1st class cricket. He is paired with Welshman Cyril Walters. Walters took many years to develop into a 1st class batsman, but did superbly in his short 11-test career averaging 71 in India and 50 in the Ashes. His 9 test innings in the Ashes included 7 consecutive 40+ scores. He finished with an overall test average of 52. Charlie Barnett, described in his Cricinfo profile "as one of the best batsmen of the 1930s" is at three. He was a very attacking player who averaged 35.4 in his 20 tests.
Middle order 4-8:
This is an area of great strength with 3 greats in McCabe @ 4, Miller @6, and Ames @ 7, supported by quality players Richardson @ 5 and McCool at 8. Having McCool batting 8 gives real depth and further strength to the batting.
Tail: Typical tailenders. Fleetwood-Smith was a genuine 11.
Bowling attack
There are 3 quality quicks in Miller (an ATG seamer), the lightning fast Nash (probably up with Eddie Gilbert as the fastest Australian of the 1930s), and the Griffith. Griffith dismissed Bradman for his 1st test duck and took 4/50 in the same innings when the Windies beat Australia in a test for the 1st time. McCabe and Barmett offer further seam support, while the spin attack has McCool's (right-arm) legspin and CFS left-arm variety. Fleetwood-Smith is described as a genius and having a right-arm and left-arm leggie working together would be very useful.
As well as being a great all-round sportsman (cricket, Aussie rules, baseball, golf, lacrosse, tennis, basketball, and swimming!!!) Richardson was a gifted fielder. His leadership and that of Miller and Walters would support Woodfull brilliantly. I'm extremely happy with this side.