What a post!
Take a bow, sir. I agree completely.
Anyone who's bowled quick over a long career is golden, in my book. On that note, I'd hereby place
Courtney Walsh,
Glenn McGrath and
Kapil Dev on top of my list.
Bagapath articulated beautifully why Walsh (and Marshall) should be considered teammen
par excellence. McGrath and Kapil (the latter in particular) had an amazing fitness record and the fact that they could play so many successive tests is commendable. Considering the rigours that fast bowling paces on the body, it's almost unbelievable.
In Kapil's case, he had to play through injuries many times (all six tests of the 1983-84 West Indian home tour, for instance) because he knew fully well that in his absence, the attack wouldn't even challenge a club batting line-up. That, in addition to his batting and captaincy burden, and the fact that he never ran away from responsibility underlines his dedication towards Indian cricket. Top bloke who overused (perhaps abused, to an extent) his body so that his side could stay competitive.
Dennis Lillee and
Imran Khan are noteworthy names for battling career-threatening injuries which could have destroyed many a lesser man. Both bowled top pace and especially having read about Lillee's fitness regime (after the injury in 1973), I have nothing but the highest respect for the amount of work they put in for their teams. It's rare to find such men of pride and dedication to excellence in the IPL w****dom generation of cricketers, IMHO!