I normally agree with you about how India are stupidly over-criticised but I think this is a pretty poor post. Do you actually think that India have a better bowling attack than South Africa, England or Australia? Or do you not think the form of Dravid or the inexperience/lack of anything so far from Pujara are potential weaknesses?
You've gone at pains to point out to aussie that you don't have to dominant to be #1, and yet you can't accept that it's possible for a team with the best batting lineup in the world (in spite of one or two weaknesses) and the fourth best attack could be the best team in the world if all the the other teams are inconsistent and have problems of their own. All the other teams other the last couple of years have had weaknesses too (which is why I got so excited by England in the other thread when I concluded they'd all but removed theirs, promptly before Collingwood retired), and you can't just have no number one team - that's why India are #1; not because they have a top-three bowling attack or seven undeniably world class batsmen.
Really, I think the main thing that has set India apart from the other top teams so far has been their ability to perform at key moments. This has nothing to do with how well they bowl overall, or even whether or not their batting can cover it - they are a fine example of how a team is more than batting lineup + bowling attack + catching. If they're only slightly behind in a game, they draw it. If they're ahead, they'll win more often than not, or at least draw. To beat India in a game you have to completely outplay them, because when it gets close they pull together as a team and generally get a favourable result.
The recent series against South Africa is a perfect example - their batting lineup was averaging 29 per wicket while South Africa's averaged 37. They played worse than their oponents overall, but as Test cricket doesn't really work like that and the timing of your performances matters, they drew the series. India are the masters of this in general, and it's an overall team thing rather than something tied to their batting or their bowling. Similarly, they drew 1-1 in Sri Lanka despite averaging 45 to Sri Lanka's 59. When South Africa toured in 2007 they averaged 41 to India's 33.. and it was a draw. There are countless examples - they've probably even won series where they barely performed better their opposition overall, but they performed when it matters, and that's what counts.
In fact, over the last two years, India are only third on the overall performance index:
Code:
Bat Bwl Index
England 36.99 31.24 1.18
South Africa 39.37 33.37 1.18
India 43.56 39.89 1.09
Australia 34.86 32.96 1.06
Sri Lanka 44.22 42.97 1.03
Pakistan 26.77 37.06 0.72
New Zealand 29.60 45.24 0.65
West Indies 30.28 49.22 0.62
But again, cricket doesn't work like that. When you perform matters - India are masters are getting results that flatter their overall efforts in series by performing when it counts. It's not a criticism and it's not a fluke; it's one of the major reasons they're such a good team, and it's a great attribute to have.
Does it mean they have a top three bowling attack? No.
Does it mean Dravid and Pujara aren't potential weaknesses? No.
It means they have an almost intangible quality as a team that sees them get results beyond their situation-unbiased performances. It means they'll always be under-rated, but it does mean it's unfair for people to say they have a middle of the road bowling attack.
EDIT: Also, cue people to see my table, not read the rest of my post and respond by saying they get results or have the best W/L% or something like that, completely missing the fact that it was precisely my point. Because that's CW these days.