Looking at Watson's signature and he has 5 superb teams. Not identical to what by selections would be, but close enough. Which would have the best chance of winning a competition between them.
PRE WWI
Grace-Trumper-Hill-Taylor-Ranjitsinhji-Faulkner-Noble-Lilley-Turner-Richardson-Barnes
PRE WWII
Hobbs-Sutcliffe-Bradman-Hammond-Headley-Macartney-Ames-Gregory-Larwood-O'Reilly-Grimmett
POST WWII
Hutton-Simpson-Kanhai-Pollock-Harvey-Sobers-Waite-Benaud-Davidson-Lindwall-Trueman
PACKER ERA
Gavaskar-Greenidge-Richards-Chappell-Lloyd-Botham-Imran-Knott-Lillee-Holding-Underwood
MODERN ERA
Hayden-Langer-Ponting-Tendulkar-Lara-Kallis-Gilchrist-Marshall-Warne-Ambrose-McGrath
Yeah, PRE-WW2 vs MODERN would be the match to see.The pre WW2 batting lineup is seriously disturbing
Disagree. Except for Bradman, everyone would either be dead or in the hospital thanks to Marshall and Ambrose/Holding.Yeah, PRE-WW2 vs MODERN would be the match to see.
Important toss to win then….Disagree. Except for Bradman, everyone would either be dead or in the hospital thanks to Marshall and Ambrose/Holding.
Those amatuer guys were not used to 90+mph honing in on their heads 3 balls out of six. On the other hand, there wouldn't be much point playing a spinner against those pre-modern guys, unless we played on uncovered wickets. Ones who were used to playing the likes of Grimmett, OReiley, etc. on uncovered wickets would annihilate the likes of Warne/Murali on covered/rolled wickets, no problems.
Yep.Important toss to win then….
my suspicion is that Bradman would struggle against Marshall and co. just as much of the next guy. The strategy he used during the Bodyline series would be highly susceptible to Marshall's yorker or Sir Ambi's slower ball.Disagree. Except for Bradman, everyone would either be dead or in the hospital thanks to Marshall and Ambrose/Holding. .
Probably, but he probably won't flat out die like Hobbs or Sutcliffe would, who were used to opening against spinners and military medium pacers. Hammond faced real pace,but those that are pitched fast & full or short of good length, with the occasional 'warning' bouncers. Not the headhunting barrage that Marshall could conjure at will.my suspicion is that Bradman would struggle against Marshall and co. just as much of the next guy. The strategy he used during the Bodyline series would be highly susceptible to Marshall's yorker or Sir Ambi's slower ball.
I think it has a lot more to do with the fact that Holding was better to watch (for most).Does anybody wonder whether Holding gets consistently picked over Garner on these ATG lists because he had a more menacing nickname? (Whispering Death vs Big Bird)
Because i'm racking my brain trying to figure out what other criteria people here are using.....almost identical record expect Garner averages nearly 3 runs less than Holding.
Does anybody wonder whether Holding gets consistently picked over Garner on these ATG lists because he had a more menacing nickname? (Whispering Death vs Big Bird)
Because i'm racking my brain trying to figure out what other criteria people here are using.....almost identical record expect Garner averages nearly 3 runs less than Holding.
Oh yeah I absolutely agree that he's a little over-rated on here. Great bowler no doubt but I wouldn't consider him for my top ten. I was just offering up explanations for why he's rated higher rather than trying to excuse his record.I understand where both of you are coming from. My big difficulty in selecting Holding (apart from the fact he was more of a thug) was his sheer propensity to get injured in the latter part of his career. The 1984/5 series in Australia was a testament to this -- MoM performance in the 1st test, missed the next 3 tests, ordinary performance in the 5th.
Indeed, most people seem to remember Holding's earlier career more fondly than the latter. Whereas Garner had a more even career path.
The "outright thunderbolt" factor was not really there after he decided to bowl from the shorter run (1983?). This is evidenced by the fact he rarely took the new ball after Marshall asserted himself on the scene. Subsequently, both Lloyd and Richards used him in a support role.
Holding was done after 1982 IIRC. The other thing about Holding that people who've seen him are fond of, is that he is the greatest pure speedster ever. Why ? Well, he is the guy who might've been slower than the fastest balls bowled by the likes of Waqar, Akhtar, Lee, Thommo, Imran but he was the extremely rare guy ( along with Marshall, who was a bit slower) who could bowl at the same speed all day. Holding, even after bowling 20 overs in a day, would bowl six balls at 93-94mph. this lack of a drop in his speed, owing to his athletics background, was simply stunning ( not many people are aware that as a 17 year old, holding was in contention to represent the Jamaican 400m & 1 mile team in olympics. he missed the cut but one needs to see the context: he barely missed the cut for olympic level athletics from a nation that is historically a track and field powerhouse!)I understand where both of you are coming from. My big difficulty in selecting Holding (apart from the fact he was more of a thug) was his sheer propensity to get injured in the latter part of his career. The 1984/5 series in Australia was a testament to this -- MoM performance in the 1st test, missed the next 3 tests, ordinary performance in the 5th.
Indeed, most people seem to remember Holding's earlier career more fondly than the latter. Whereas Garner had a more even career path.
The "outright thunderbolt" factor was not really there after he decided to bowl from the shorter run (1983?). This is evidenced by the fact he rarely took the new ball after Marshall asserted himself on the scene. Subsequently, both Lloyd and Richards used him in a support role.
Here are the team rankings after tallying the 'Highest Ratings' achieved by each player according to the ICC. The respective teams are therefore made-up of players operating at their peak performance. The ICC does not give a Wicketkeeper Rating to Wicketkeepers as it sees the task as too subjectively difficult.Looking at Watson's signature and he has 5 superb teams. Not identical to what by selections would be, but close enough. Which would have the best chance of winning a competition between them.
Very well said. I mentioned it in my favorite XI (which needs to be completed btw ) that of all the bowlers that I have seen over the years Michael Holding was the one who could bowl consistently quick for a fair period of time. Sure the Akhtars and the Lees were quicker but they couldn't maintain that sort of speed for too long in test match conditions but Holding could. I don't really see much of a difference between Holding and Marshall in terms of the quality that they offered and I am pretty sure that most of the people who saw them bowl will agree with me. Additionally there are also the points that PEWS mentions. Holding definitely much more enjoyable to watch and who can forget that glide to the crease? There is a reason that Michael Holding is called the Rolls Royce of fast bowlers.Holding was done after 1982 IIRC. The other thing about Holding that people who've seen him are fond of, is that he is the greatest pure speedster ever. Why ? Well, he is the guy who might've been slower than the fastest balls bowled by the likes of Waqar, Akhtar, Lee, Thommo, Imran but he was the extremely rare guy ( along with Marshall, who was a bit slower) who could bowl at the same speed all day. Holding, even after bowling 20 overs in a day, would bowl six balls at 93-94mph. this lack of a drop in his speed, owing to his athletics background, was simply stunning ( not many people are aware that as a 17 year old, holding was in contention to represent the Jamaican 400m & 1 mile team in olympics. he missed the cut but one needs to see the context: he barely missed the cut for olympic level athletics from a nation that is historically a track and field powerhouse!)
And Holding-Marshall were a newball pairing for a while, Marshall replaced Roberts to become Holding's partner, a scenario that persisted for 3-4 seasons before Garner replaced Holding to become Marshall's partner.
Unfortunately for Garner, the West Indies ****ed it up a bit by relegating him to support bowler, being intoxicated by the rapid rise of the faster (but less lethal) Patrick Patterson.