a massive zebra said:
Im not saying that Harmison is awful, im saying that you must be mad to compare two all-time greats (McGrath and Larwood) with a decent but erratic bowler who took advantage of a dreadful team.
Holding has probably only seen Harmison in the West Indies, and not at his normal wayward self. Even so, im sure he has the sense to place him several leagues below the likes of McGrath and Larwood.
In the next post you will probably we proclaiming Harmison 'the best bowler ever' on the basis that no one has even taken a 7-for so cheaply in Tests.
I am certainly not going to say that Harmison is the best bowler ever. Yet. He'll have to prove it first.
My basic point is that I don't accept this "normal wayward self" bit at all. He has not been "wayward" since the second innings at The Oval last year. At least, not for more than a couple of overs - and *every* bowler has had matches where they've bowled rather badly for a couple of overs.
At Lord's this weekend he wasn't wayward after those first two overs on day one. He may not have been all that threatening most of the time, but he is reported to have thought he bowled rather poorly. One of the tihngs about great bowlers, though, is thet even when they're not bowling well, they come up with the odd devastating spell - as Harmison did on the morning of day 2, and arguably on the afternoon of day four, when he was keeping pretty good control while bowling at 91mph.
If you are going to call his previous record into the argument, then I will have to point out that McGrath was just as wayward in his early Test matches, which is reflected in his early-Harmisonian record to that point.
Nobody has bowled as well for England as Harmison has in his last seven Tests since Bob Willis was in his pomp - and if Harmison only turns out as well as Willis did, we won't have done badly.
Some figures after 17 Tests. The PI is my own invention, being the square root of the average * strike rate, ie sqrt((Balls/wicket)*(runs/wicket)). It's pretty good at rating attacking effectiveness, with 42 being just Test class, 36 being very good, and 30 being world class (by examination of how things worked over all Tests in the 1990s).
W A SR PI
JN Gillespie 68 20.22 39.71 28.33
IT Botham 87 18.68 43.93 28.65
FH Tyson 76 18.56 45.42 29.03
Waqar Younis 80 20.92 41.11 29.32
FS Trueman 81 21.12 44.52 30.66
J Garner 89 19.64 49.16 31.07
IR Bishop 82 20.09 49.29 31.47
CA Walsh 71 21.58 47.27 31.94
AME Roberts 87 22.79 49.40 33.55
CEH Croft 81 23.74 48.11 33.80
MA Holding 76 22.90 50.05 33.85
JR Thomson 80 25.30 48.75 35.02
SJ Harmison 72 24.43 51.36 35.42
SM Pollock 58 23.39 56.38 36.31
DK Lillee 76 24.03 58.17 37.39
AA Donald 75 26.37 53.35 37.50
D Gough 69 27.39 53.18 38.17
JA Snow 74 26.89 57.78 39.41
ARC Fraser 75 25.62 62.11 39.89
DG Cork 71 29.43 56.97 40.95
CEL Ambrose 60 27.35 61.58 41.03
MD Marshall 55 28.83 59.36 41.37
Wasim Akram 53 26.83 64.00 41.44
GD McGrath 64 28.68 60.97 41.82
RGD Willis 55 29.67 59.55 42.03
JB Statham 42 28.07 69.00 44.01
AR Caddick 61 32.88 63.97 45.86
H Larwood 55 30.76 71.65 46.94
Imran Khan 70 33.32 67.74 47.51
NA Foster 48 33.77 70.45 48.84
DE Malcolm 59 37.42 69.03 50.82
J Srinath 46 35.08 80.35 53.09
(I'm sorry I have no idea how to get this awful editor to do a useful fixed pitch font with tabs)
It seems to me that Harmison is keeping some rather good company at his level in the table, and avoiding some rather bad company lower down. Lol's lowly position can be explained by over-exposure to the Don in an era when Tests were far less frequent affairs.
Face it. Harmison is well on course to be a great bowler.
Cheers,
Mike