I saw him the other day in a suit and tie and he looked scary then as well, but that doesn't make him a top male model.How come Joel Garner doesn't come into the frame more often? I haven't seen enough of him to really know, but from what I've seen his bowling looked scary.
Yeah, agreed. Garner is not as much of a strike bowlers as the Marshalls, Lillees and McGraths here, but he can be an ideal foil for a strike bowler.Garner is very highly rated, in fact overrated on here. A couple of years ago there was a poll between Garner and Lillee, and Lillee was only a couple of votes in front.
Interesting voting pattern here. There's a kyear2 and a kyear22, the latter of whom logs in only to vote in polls.
Marshall, despite stiff competition from two or even three of - holding, garner, ambrose, walsh and bishop all the time and with croft, patterson, roberts thrown into the mix occasionally, still ended up with 22 five wicket hauls in 81 tests. Averaged under 25 against all teams. Got the big guns in the opposition out regularly. Had pace, swing, variation, aggression, stamina and style in tons. Prime candidate for the title of "Best pacer Ever". Just an inch ahead of even the best of the best like hadlee, mcgrath, imran, lillee, ambrose, trueman etc.
This is awesomeInteresting voting pattern here. There's a kyear2 and a kyear22, the latter of whom logs in only to vote in polls.
Andy Lloyd, for example, had his Test match batting career curtailed to just 33 minutes during the first Test of the 1984 visit to England. Struck on the right temple by a screaming Marshall bouncer, Lloyd was out like a light as he fell motionless on the pitch. Hospitalized for several days, he was left with permanent vision impairment, never played cricket again until 1985, and failed to regain the form that would warrant a Test recall.
MurderousDuring the first One day International of England's 1986 tour to the West Indies, played in Jamaica, Mike Gatting lost his wicket when a bouncer from Marshall was redirected onto his stumps by his nose. So vicious was the blow that fragments of bone cartilage were found lodged in the seam of the ball. It was the first game of the series and Gatting never made another appearance until the last Test in Antigua, almost two months later.
Massively disagree, what I loved most about Mcgrath was his intensity and consistency, but to watch Marshall bowl was exhilerating. I think it was Bagbath who articulated it the best earlier in this thread.It's a lot closer than the poll result suggests.
Taking it on bare stats and the fact that Marshall died tragically early are the main factors here.
But huge kudos to Marshall for bring the best of a huge strike-force of West Indian bowlers in the 1980s.