Richard
Cricket Web Staff Member
Something I have often wondered, TBH - most of the best bowlers of the early- and mid-20th-century were spinners - finger mostly in England (Rhodes, Blythe, Verity, Lock, Laker, Underwood) and wrist in Australia (Grimmett, O'Reilly, Benaud, you could add Mailey but it'd be debatable IMO), and a combo of finger and mystery in West Indies (Valentine, Gibbs, Ramadhin). It says a lot that Larwood, who was none too successful as a Test bowler, was almost certainly the best seamer until Bedser, Lindwall, Miller, Statham, Trueman, Tyson, Adcock, Heine et al in the late 1940s and 1950s. There were of course Nissar and Singh from India who never got the Test chances they deserved.Good to see SF Barnes making a late dash. One question though, I wonder why in the batsman thread we had a heap of batsmen from years gone by, but here the bowler lists seem very modern. Is it because all the best bowlers have been in the modern age? Or do the older ones not get the respect they deserve? And if the latter is true, why do the older batsmen stay in our memories but the bowlers are so easily forgotten?
Have often thought the 1950s seamers never get the credit they deserve, though, TBH. Lindwall especially would be right up near the top of my list. Adcock is certainly worth more than a second look too.
Obviously, SF Barnes, if you take a proper look, stands-out as something close to the Bradman of bowling. If he'd been a bit less of a social misfit and certainly if he'd played 20 years later than he did he might well be as unequivocally the best as Bradman was.
But before Larwood, the only fast-bowling name I really know much of is Lockwood. Yet I'm sure there must have been some fine ones in Australia, and am sure Sean or Sir Nev (if around presently) would be happy to fill me in on a few names. None of them ever seemed to play much.