Yeah, I agree with the points you're making there, however I'm just suggesting that holding the returns of Swann/Vettori against him is a little unfair, because the only thing they have in common with Murali is the direction in which their stock ball turns.
Turning from leg to off isn't inherently superior than turning from off to leg on Australian pitches. The associated methods of turning from off to leg are what are ineffective in Australia. Murali's methods were very different to the standard off break bowler.
And yeah, if you picked both you marginalise your quicks to be be borderline useless - there's a limited number of overs to be bowled. Bad idea when you have Glenn McGrath in your side.
Yeah I can see that. But to be honest, most touring spinners have a shocking time of it in Australia - the pitches really, really aren't good for spin bowlers who haven't adjusted to the fact that you can't bowl more than two inches short of a good length or you'll be useless.
I'm not sure how you can judge his Australia record on just 5 total matches, with 2 played in 1995 when he was nowhere near the bowler he become, 1 played in a farce of a ICC world XI match, and just 2 more after. It's hardly enough of a sample size to assume that he would've maintained the same record if he played more tests considering how much better his record was elsewhere.
Either way, I don't know why picking the ATG XI became a discussion on off-spinners in Australia - it should be irrelevant to the discussion.
I was objecting to the bolded part of the post. ODI spin bowling, both bowling it and
batting against it, is so fundamentally different from how it works in Tests that it's incredibly difficult to draw comparisons between the two. Even more than samplesizelol problems (which
is a problem, granted) - but in any case, the point is based on the argument that picking a second spinner for Australian pitches if they aren't ATG legspin is a really, really bad idea because everyone else seems to have a pretty horrible time of it with only a few isolated exceptions.
The
broader point of this discussion, and why I'm pursuing it, is that these ATG XI discussions often seem strangely abstract to me and oddly theoretical in that they seem to ignore practical considerations - which, of course, are what
actual team selection centres around. I've always found that odd, and this discussion is very much along those same lines - yeah, on record and reputation picking both Murali and Warne for Australian decks might seem like a winner, but then you actually start thinking about what would happen when you actually tried to play a Test with that sort of team and you quickly realise it's a terrible idea.