Well, it lasted a long time and that helps in such stats. Then the gap with the other sides reduced considerably and that helps for sure.
I agree Australia had a great run although I think the side that played for Australia from December 1972 (Pakistan series) to March 1977 (Centenary Test) was a great side.
- They played 36 Tests in this period, lost 4, won 21 and drew the rest.
- Of the 10 series they won 8 and drew two (Pakistan at home and New Zealand away.
- The top five batsmen of this side were
- Ian Chappell : 2634 at 53.8 - 7 centuries
- Ian Redpath : 2081 at 50.8 - 6 centuries
- G. Chappell : 3046 at 58.6 - 10 centuries
- DougWalters : 2060 at 51.5 - 6 centuries
- RB McCosker : 1243 at 47.8 - 3 centuries
Thay also had Paul Sheahan, Gary Cosier and Graham Yallop but they played fewer games.
There top five bowlers were
- Dennis Lillee
- Jeff Thomson
- Max Walker
- Gary Gilmour
- Asley Mallett
That list needs no introduction. Besides them they had Terry Jenner, Bob Massie, Geoff Dymock.
As keeper they had Rodney Marsh.
This was some side.
And its not as if the opposition was weak.
Here are the bowling attacks of the exact same periods (top bowlers of the top countries)
Pakistan
- Imran Khan
- Sarfaraz Nawaz
- Intekhab Alam
- Mushtaq Ahmed
West Indies
- Andy Roberts
- Mike Holding
- Lance Gibbs
- Garry Sobers
England
- John Snow
- Chris Old
- Bob Willis
- Derryk Underwood
India
- Bedi
- Chandrashekhar
- Prasanna
- Venkatraghvan
New Zealand
These are the only sides they played. There were no minnows. The youngest entrants (Pakistan) had been in Test cricket for a quarter of a century. And against these bowlers, Australia's fabulous batting line up scored like true champions.
Its not as if the bowlers had bunnies facing them the world cricket had some really good batsmen too. Here is a sample.
England
- Amiss
- Edrich
- Boycott
- Tony Greig
- Fletcher
West Indies
- Fredricks
- Grrenidge
- Richards
- Kallicharan
- Lloyd
Pakistan
- Majid Khan
- Sadiq Mohammad
- Zaheer Abbas
- Javed Miandad
- Mushtaq Mohd
- Imran Khan
- Intikhab Alam
India
- Gavaskar
- Vishwanath
- Amarnath
- Wadekar
New Zealand
- Glenn Turner
- Bevan Congdon
- Mark Burgess
There is are some legends in those sides. Yet the Australian bowlers dominated the period completely. Actually the strength of the Rest of the World (besides Australia) batting can be seen from the fact that despite their dominance, most Australian bowlers during this period, have bowling averages higher than their career averages. That is not an indication of their not being at their peak but of the huge talent that abounded in the world at that time.
The West Indian period was to take over but frankly, I do not think that the great West Indian side of the 80.s had to contend with as great opposition as the Australians of the first half of the 70's id.
For me how many matches a team wins consecutively is not what decides who is the greatest. If that was the case Hanif with 499 or Walcott with five consecutive hundreds or some such silly stat should be used for deciding the greatest batsman till that time.
I have been watching Test cricket for 48 years now and I do not think there has been a side who has dominated the world - and a world of great opposition- as did the Australians under Ian Chappell.