One day in Perth, I played a defensive push and Dennis Lillee picked up the ball in his follow-through, shaking his hand, as if I'd stung him with the ferocity of my drive. I enjoyed that. Dennis could be genuinely and collegially funny. He was also the best bowler I played against.
He was the perfect fast bowler: quick, hostile and accurate. He naturally swung the ball away, which is so much more lethal when done at his kind of pace. And he had a magnificent physique. As with Allan Donald more recently, he was so well proportioned that when you came up close he seemed taller than he actually was. His run-up and action were immaculate, left arm high and bent at elbow and wrist, menacing acceleration (with occasional speed wobble) and a full follow-through. He would always prefer to attack than defend. He was courageous and persistent, coming back with the same energy at the end of a day as he'd had at the beginning. He was also shrewd, a master of bowling as pitches got slower and the bounce lower, as well, of course, as when there was bounce and movement. He was a captain's dream.
Don Bennett, for many years Middlesex's coach, watched a Lillee masterclass at Lord's one day during his prime, when he happily demonstrated aspects of his art to the young cricketers present.
In the middle of the Nursery Ground, he bowled and bowled, calling out before each ball - ''outswinger to hit off stump'', ''outswinger to hit middle stump'', ''inswinger to hit leg stump''. Don said he bowled an over at good pace in which every ball did exactly what Lillee had intended.
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