My view on the relative merits and rankings of the great fast bowlers tends broadly to match the CW community, but one of the exceptions is that I rate Imran higher than most – whereas he’s in most people’s top ten, he’s in my top 5 (and maybe even 3 or 4). It could be that I’m such a fan of his work and now so wedded to the idea that he should rank so highly that I handwave or make excuses for anything that shows otherwise, which is something that I suppose a lot of us do.
His home v away record is certainly more skewed than most of the other great quicks, though it’s always felt to me as much a question of circumstance than ability. As we know, Imran in the 1970s took a while to develop into the great bowler he became, and seven of his first nine Test series between 1971 and 1980 were away from home, which always had him playing catch-up from an away-average perspective. Despite that, he still produced big wicket-taking performances in Australia and the West Indies, and – while not official, of course – had a superb record in WSC.
He definitely then benefited from home advantage during his peak years as a bowler by playing more often in Pakistan than elsewhere, but it’s been noted often that Pakistan wasn’t necessarily a fast-bowlers’ paradise and his record there in the early- to mid-80s wasn’t just good, it was beyond phenomenal.
And even then, when given the chance away from home he was still brilliant – he had a very good tour to Australia, two superb tours of England and a fantastic series in the West Indies. He did well in Sri Lanka, too, though wasn’t quite as dominant as he'd been at home.
It also shouldn’t be forgotten that the knee injury which cut him down in 1983 came right in the middle of that extraordinary peak (he was on a run in which he averaged sub-20 for eight consecutive series in which he bowled). He toured Australia in 1983/84 but played just two Tests and bowled in neither of them. One of the great disappointments for Australian cricket fans (though probably not Australian batsmen) was that his knee injury meant we never got to see absolute prime Imran as a fast bowler in Australia in the way we did Malcolm Marshall the following summer or – at an even more epic level – Richard Hadlee the year after.
As I say, you could make similar arguments and/or refutations for or against any number of bowlers at about the same level and I get why many on here rate Imran fractionally lower than the handful of blokes at the very top. But for me, he’s right up there.