Yep, Soahil was as good as Miandad.CW has gone insane in the last few pages.
Miller = Border as a batsman
Zaheer=Walsh
Botham > Walsh as a bowler
Eagerly awaiting to hear someone rate Aamir Sohail as Javed Miandad's equivalent with the bat.
no it is not. Walsh did take 144 wickets in his last 30 tests at under 21 runs per wicket and finished strongly, masking many many years of solid but relatively unspectacular service to West Indies. but in his first 102 matches, the same as botham's career, he took 375 wickets, less than botham's tally of 383, and took 15 five-fers considerably less than botham's 27 many of which were batting line up bending efforts and most of them were solo hits too. I can reel of ten match winning series, turning bowling performances by botham (all of them before 1986 and most before 1983) but I would struggle to nominate performances from Walsh that shook cricket grounds like beefy's bowling exploits. for a whil, I would say between 1978-82, botham was the best bowler in the world. Walsh was in the top 5 for many years. don't remember him being the ultimate world beater at any point.Do agree completely. It is a joke to say Botham was a better bowler than Walsh. Number of 5 wicket and 10 wicket hauls is such a poor metric to compare 2 players if that is the only metric used.
All said and done, Walsh took 136 more wickets than Beefy and Ian would have to get them at an average of 13.30 to be Walsh's equal. A declining Botham played lesser and lesser in his 30s which protected his averages, and if he ever was to play 132 test matches, he would be averaging north of 30.no it is not. Walsh did take 144 wickets in his last 30 tests at under 21 runs per wicket and finished strongly, masking many many years of solid but relatively unspectacular service to West Indies. but in his first 102 matches, the same as botham's career, he took 375 wickets, less than botham's tally of 383, and took 15 five-fers considerably less than botham's 27 many of which were batting line up bending efforts and most of them were solo hits too. I can reel of ten match winning series, turning bowling performances by botham (all of them before 1986 and most before 1983) but I would struggle to nominate performances from Walsh that shook cricket grounds like beefy's bowling exploits. for a whil, I would say between 1978-82, botham was the best bowler in the world. Walsh was in the top 5 for many years. don't remember him being the ultimate world beater at any point.
This isn't a good thing to bring up when botham's first 40 odd tests mask almost a decade of absolute garbage. 1982-1992 Botham averaged 37, which is more like Fidel Edwards than Courtney Walsh.no it is not. Walsh did take 144 wickets in his last 30 tests at under 21 runs per wicket and finished strongly, masking many many years of solid but relatively unspectacular service to West Indies. but in his first 102 matches, the same as botham's career, he took 375 wickets, less than botham's tally of 383, and took 15 five-fers considerably less than botham's 27 many of which were batting line up bending efforts and most of them were solo hits too.
That A side had some amazing players who went on to have illustrious careers, but were they up for it in 1997 ? Not so sure.Here's an interesting one. How many instances can you name an 'A' squad which would have a realistic chance at defeating the main team?
Australia - First Test vs South Africa 1997
Matthew Elliott
Mark Taylor*
Greg Blewett
Mark Waugh
Steve Waugh
Ricky Ponting
Ian Healy+
Paul Reiffel
Shane Warne
Michael Kasprowicz
Glenn McGrath
vs
Aus A
Justin Langer
Matthew Hayden
Stuart Law*
Damien Martyn
Michael Bevan
Darren Lehmann
Adam Gilchrist+
Brad Hogg
Andy Bichel
Jason Gillespie
Damien Fleming
Ok Bag, I'd like to see all of bothams atg performances against the best team of his time. Just one. And Walsh not being the best bowler is more a reflection of the bowling depth not his fault. When he got into the wi team he had to compete with the likes of MM, Ambrose, holding, garner Bishop etc. The fact that he broke into the team in the first place and stayed there is a testament to his greatness. Courtney didn't consistently take the new ball until later in his career. Prior to that he had to bowl into the wind and do the donkey work. I dont know how you expect Courtney early in his career to run through batting lineups, after his contemporaries had feasted. Anyway, what walsh did in india 94 compares to anything beefy did. Beefy > walsh the bowler no way sir. Might as well rate beefy above wasim as well. Statistically, Walsh is closer to Wasim than he is to Bothamno it is not. Walsh did take 144 wickets in his last 30 tests at under 21 runs per wicket and finished strongly, masking many many years of solid but relatively unspectacular service to West Indies. but in his first 102 matches, the same as botham's career, he took 375 wickets, less than botham's tally of 383, and took 15 five-fers considerably less than botham's 27 many of which were batting line up bending efforts and most of them were solo hits too. I can reel of ten match winning series, turning bowling performances by botham (all of them before 1986 and most before 1983) but I would struggle to nominate performances from Walsh that shook cricket grounds like beefy's bowling exploits. for a whil, I would say between 1978-82, botham was the best bowler in the world. Walsh was in the top 5 for many years. don't remember him being the ultimate world beater at any point.
Those final 3 years tells us the bowler Walsh was. Even in his late 30s, very nearly 5 wickets per match at a great average. I find it a bit weird that peaking late is not given enough weight-age in CW as opposed to peaking early. Almost as if a late career flourish is a crime.The five fers comparison is a little silly yes. Walsh bowled alongside at least 2 top class test bowlers for nearly his whole career. Botham had nowhere near that level of competiton for wickets
Ignoring the obvious 80s pack, he had Ambrose and Bishop for most of the 90s. We say Bishop had a stunted career but he still played about 40 tests in the 90s. It makes sense that Walsh had his most productive years in the final 30 tests as Bishop finally relented in '98 so it was only him and Ambrose competing for wickets from 98-00
And one less 10 for as well.McGrath only had 2 more fifers than Beefy in a lot more matches too
Yeah I'm somewhat surprised by that but then I realize he had Warne at the other end.And one less 10 for as well.