OverratedSanity
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Purely for the thrill of watching them bowl, I'd have gone for Donald and Waqar .
Brilliant post from start to finish.Admittedly I only voted for Ambrose because I knew McGrath would dominate the poll anyway. He really was amazing. I don't think I've ever seen a bowler who was never ever mediocre. He was almost always a threat... Even guys like Ambrose had stretches where they'd look ineffective and would resort to containing and even be hit around a*bit. McGrath was just always good, no matter what the situation, no matter what the conditions.
That said, I really believe that the fact that Ambrose, Donald, etc. retired early in the 2000s helped his legacy a lot and kind of artificially inflates how good he was compared to them.
Still has a case for being the best quick ever, mind. And any top 10 of all time fast bowlers should imo begin with 1.Marshall 2.McGrath
McGrath was better, but wasn't a great gap by any measure.Ambrose and then Murali/Warne/McGrath.
Every time i watch footage of Ambrose, he scares the **** out of me. Maybe doesn't have numbers quite as good as McGrath, but anyone who rates McGrath as clearly better is kidding themselves.
1930s. And they played for the same team as well. O'reilley-Grimmett combo must be the greatest spin combo ever to have actually taken the field until Warne and Murali faced off each other in the 90s and 00s.When's the last time the two best spinners of all time operate together in the same era?
McGrath's length and lift was really awkward too tbh.McGrath a close third. He was immense, but ever so slightly inferior to Curtly for mine. That nasty bounce that Curtly could get off a good length was just unplayable.
In hindsight, not as awkward as this post sounds.McGrath's length and lift was really awkward too tbh.
Hmmmmm, however in the other two tests he played in that series, Australia were comprehensively outplayed at OT and only survived by the skin of their teeth due to one of the all time great rearguard knocks by Ponting. Then at the Oval McGrath and his fellow bowlers were smacked out of the game by a rampant Pietersen.I think that if McGrath hadn't stood on that ball at Edgbaston in 2005 we'd have won that test, and probably that series.
I think that series showed how important McGrath was to Australia. The two tests that England won were the two that McGrath missed thru injury. And in spite of how immense Warne was in that series, it wasn't enough.
It was great for world cricket for England to win that series, but the series really showed how McGrath was the difference between Australia and the other teams of his time.
By some margin. Was joy to watch. Dude had me tuned in entire 90s to watch many Pakistani matches.Purely for watching on skill it would be Wasim for me.
Yeah. I do think that one of the reason that wasim is so highly rated by pundits and peers alike was his skill with the ball. It didn't always translate into wickets because so many times he just seemed to conjure deliveries that would be too good for the batsman to get anywhere near. it didn't translate into wickets but it was great theatre, which is what I suppose many yearn for in international sports.By some margin. Was joy to watch. Dude had me tuned in entire 90s to watch many Pakistani matches.
O'Reilly - Grimmett the best spin combo to take the field for the same team? Or do Warne - MacGill run them down? Laker - Lock in their too. I would say:1930s. And they played for the same team as well. O'reilley-Grimmett combo must be the greatest spin combo ever to have actually taken the field until Warne and Murali faced off each other in the 90s and 00s.
Yah, I don't recall any other bowler putting so many unplayable deliveries of different styles. Most great bowlers have 1-2 variety of unplayable deliveries.Yeah. I do think that one of the reason that wasim is so highly rated by pundits and peers alike was his skill with the ball. It didn't always translate into wickets because so many times he just seemed to conjure deliveries that would be too good for the batsman to get anywhere near. it didn't translate into wickets but it was great theatre, which is what I suppose many yearn for in international sports.
I think it's O'Reilly-Grimmett then Kumble-Harbhajan (before Bhajji started bowling trash)... I wouldn't consider Barnes to be a spin bowler..O'Reilly - Grimmett the best spin combo to take the field for the same team? Or do Warne - MacGill run them down? Laker - Lock in their too. I would say:
1) O'Reilly-Grimmett
2) Laker-Lock
3) Prasanna-Chandra-Bedi
4) Warne-MacGill
5) Kumble-Harbhajan
6) Saqlain-Mushtaq (Ahmed)
7) Gupte-Mankad
8) Ramadhin-Valentine
Barnes-Rhodes played 24 games together, but Rhodes was acting in a primarily batting role at that point, and took just 33 wickets in those 24 games. Not stellar by any stretch of the imagination
Barnes-Blythe played just 4 games together, but were awesome in that!
If you consider O'Reilly to be a spin bowler, then you should consider Barnes as one too Most contemporary accounts point to this.I think it's O'Reilly-Grimmett then Kumble-Harbhajan (before Bhajji started bowling trash)... I wouldn't consider Barnes to be a spin bowler..
afaik O'Reilly was a leg-spinner and Barnes bowled "medium-pace-all-sorts"?If you consider O'Reilly to be a spin bowler, then you should consider Barnes as one too Most contemporary accounts point to this.