Without having accompanying match situations it is hard to judge. Curtly had to play in a much more difficult time period for WI. I am saying that if you want to call out Marshall as really good then SR isn't a very good measure of how good he was.How is strike rate being lower not an advantage all other things remaining the same?
We'll be going around in circles. Perhaps we can agree to disagreeI would compare Marshall with his contemporaries as regards to the Strike Rates. The srike rate of Marshall being 10% lower than other bowlers who are all time absolute great fast bowlers is quite exceptional. In terms of fast bowlers, how fast one can take wickets significantly affects their effectiveness. Dale Steyn has a great average but the strike rate is so great, it means you are going to get out sooner rather than latter to these bowlers.
Re Waqar: His SR is so low because for a period, around a third of his career, he was unplayable. For that third of his career, there can be a reasonable argument formed that he was the greatest any one has ever been.
Of course this isn't a classic example. Donald was just a better bowler. He had express pace, and he could make the opposition batsmen squirm, add to that the quality of wickets. Just so many more factors to choose rather than SR. Pollock just wasn't in the same class as Donald for mine. SimpleAllan Donald v Shaun Pollock is a classic example for the strike rates topic.
Donald
Avg - 22.25
S/R - 47.00
Wkts - 330
Pollock
Avg - 23.11
S/R - 57.80
Wkts - 421
Whom would you choose over the other more often than not?
I cannot see how a strike rate difference of almost 7 balls per wicket can possibly be immaterial.yes, but my point is that taking 6 more deliveries per wicket will most likely be immaterial on the outcome of the match. Taking an extreme case, a bowler with an average of 60 might take a wicket every 11 deliveries but he isn't very useful to the team since 10 of his deliveries disappear for 6 on each of them.
What is this?Sobers v Imran v Gilchrist.
Speaking of strike rates, Sobers' strike rate is over 90 as a bowler. He also managed to take just 6 5 wicket hauls as a bowler. While Sobers was one of the greatest batsmen to have played the game, he was okay as a bowler. Imran on the other hand averages close to 40 with the bat and was a great bowler. So why is Sobers rated higher than Imran when,
Sobers = Super great batsman, average to good bowler
Imran = Super great bowler, good batsan averaging above 35 including the last period of his career where he averaged in 50s
Neither of the two were great in both the main departments of the game mind. I might tend towards Imran ahead of Sobers here.
Take Gilchrist who was great as a batsman and a keeper. One would have to put Gilchrist as ahead of the two if one doesn't consider all rounders in the classical sense.
If Marshall gets you a wicket every 8 overs and Ambrose gets you a wicket every 9 overs (considering there are 450 overs in the match), how is that material in most cases?I cannot see how a strike rate difference of almost 7 balls per wicket can possibly be immaterial.
Seeing who is a better all rounder (added in the original post now).What is this?
You're preaching to the choir actually. A case can actually be made that Imran is the better all rounder as he was a pretty amazing batsman in the last years of his career.
Yeah, but a SR of 90 is just plain awful. His SR against Pakistan is even worse, something like 350 balls per wicket or something. Beggars beliefSpinners do tend to have far worse strike rates but they can bowl that much more overs, and hence get you that many more wickets. Tiger O'Reilly had a S/R of 70 which was pretty darn good for a spinner back in the day. Warne had an excellent strike rate of 57. A strike rate around 90 isn't amazing though, yeah. Sobers and Lance Gibbs are both there.