I originally was going to ignore the cesspool that is a Warne/Murali debate, but was pleasently suprised to see some good points made in here that don't try and compare how great each player is, but rather compares their styles.
One thing noticeable about their bowling styles is the fact that Warne's style is such that he will always enjoy a pacy and bouncy pitch much more than Murali would.
I think this has most to do with Warne bowling style. Unlike say, Stuart MacGill, Warne's leggies don't just go from right to left, he imparts overspin on the ball. As a former leggie it's something I tried, and I inadvertedly bowled a top spinner. It's an incredibly difficult thing to do. For me, Warne bowled his best when he had two things. The first is drift, and it's something we didn't see a lot of from Warne late in his career. I think people forget how much he actually got the ball to drift and it made things, at times, virtually impossible for batsmen. The second is bounce, which is a reason why batsmen nicked so many balls.
Warne's going to thrive on wickets like the GABBA, which offer an incredible amount of bounce.
Murali's wares depend mostly on turn and mystery balls (doosra for him, if he were a leggie, it would be the googly) and mostly he uses it well when the ball holds up off the pitch.
I agree 100%. I'd like to expand on that, but really you hit the nail on the head.
At the end of the day, for me, Warne is 5% more likely to bounce back after a pounding and produce a great match changing spell out of nowhere than Murali and Murali is 5% more likely than Warne to NOT have an off day.... It comes down to your personal preference... For instance, in selecting a World XI, if I pick an attack of McGrath, Akram and Ambrose, then I would definitely want Warne as my spinner because I want that 5% more of match winning ability than the 5% extra consistency.. But if my attack was Akram, Marshall and Younis (at his peak, that is), then I would want Murali simply because in that case I would value that 5% more consistency higher..... It comes down to personal preference and I don't think there is any real way one can be claimed to be better than the other unequivocally...
This was a fantastic post. And it's blatantly true. I've always felt Warne succeeded at times when other bowlers couldn't. Part of the Warne charisma was that he could obtain wickets from a force of will ala Ian Botham. Even at the end of his career when he really only had two main deliveries, he could probe and manipulate batsmen. Conversely, I think we all know Warne can't bowl for as long as Murali or with as much accuracy.
I don't mind ranking cricketers, in fact ranking sportsmen is somewhat of a hobby of mine, but as time's gone by I'm starting to dislike comparisons. There is no comparison between the two bowlers here because their circumstances are too different.
Most of all, I don't like how comparisons detract from both players achievements.
With Murali people say:
* He's taken wickets off cheap opposition more than others.
- Now that is true, but no other bowler has been so prolific against Bangladesh and Zimbabwe, and yet this somehow counts against Murali. Murali can't help it, he can only play the teams he's given. If you're a Murali fan you clearly sense that it's unfair to take away those accomplishments because what he's done is remarkable. T
With Warne people say:
*He fed off McGrath
-By Warne's own admission he enjoyed the pressure McGrath put on the batsmen when he bowled. But nobody bowls Warne's deliveries but Warne. When he bowled with McGrath and bowled a loose delivery, Warne got killed. Yet when he got a wicket his achievement is diminished when you say he couldn't have got it without McGrath. Realistically, good deliveries get you wickets. Unless teams are staved for runs and feel the need to play a few shots, I don't think there's any help to had. Because of the Warne/Murali comparisons, the impact McGrath had on Warne's stats is beyong overstated. And what's more, people never reverse it and say "McGrath has awesome stats courtesy of Warne", something I also think it condusive of the Warne/Murali debate.
I have an opinion on who might be better, but certainly there's no accurate comparison, and in all likelihood each bowler is better than the other depending on the circumstances in which they bowl under. But I've grown an extreme distaste for comparisons because they're beginning to detract from each bowler's accomplishments. I'm as guilty as anybody for over-analysing the pros and cons each bowler has, and in the end it started to detract from each bowlers accomplishments.