kyear2
Hall of Fame Member

Which was the most dominant Test side ever?
The Invincibles, Lloyd's West Indians, Waugh's Australians and others are in the mix. Who's on top?
This doesn't nearly prove anyone's point, but was a fun read.
50s England likely.Speaking of which, which team would we say was 4th all time, dominant home and away?
Nobody forgets this. The two best test sides in history both had room for improvement. Both ran into fatigue and injury problems. You are aware about how AUS in particular was more vulnerable when these issues hit their best bowlers.Clearly not. 2 of the best Test sides in history did not have an all rounder. Why do people keep forgetting this.
Dude . . .Nobody forgets this. The two best test sides in history both had room for improvement. Both ran into fatigue and injury problems. You are aware about how AUS in particular was more vulnerable when these issues hit their best bowlers.
I'm specifically responding to the statement that you need to pick an all-rounder for a Test team
I'll say it again, obviously if you have an all-rounder that makes your team stronger, you should pick them. Obviously both 00s Aus and 80s WI could have been strengthened, in various ways and having a world-class all-rounder could be one of them.Again, I'm not arguing against all-rounders. Literally just refuting the statement that they are essential, which is evidently wrong.
They also did not need a great third seamer though.Dude . . .
I'll say it again, obviously if you have an all-rounder that makes your team stronger, you should pick them. Obviously both 00s Aus and 80s WI could have been strengthened, in various ways and having a world-class all-rounder could be one of them.
But you do not need an all-rounder for a Test team to be successful, clearly. Aus won 16 Tests in a row twice without one, and picking a substandard all-rounder would have made the team weaker.
Why do you keep responding to me with thisThey also did not need a great third seamer though.
Because it refutes the idea that looking at what 1 or 2 great teams had is a good way of judging what makes a great team. In the real world any great team can afford multiple weaknesses because other sides have more. There is no role that is truly necessary if we apply your logic universally. 50s England and 60s SA had a 20 averaging pinch blocker as opener which isn't ideal but those guys doubled up as stock bowlers so it worked in the context of those teams. 80s West Indies didn't need a great spinner or a great #6.Why do you keep responding to me with this
Good observation I guess? I agree?
That's extremely obvious but again I literally just pointed out exactly what I said. Word for word. Whatever else you're inferring, which tbf I can understand why you would given the topic of the thread, is unintentional on my part.Because it refutes the idea that looking at what 1 or 2 great teams had is a good way of judging what makes a great team. In the real world any great team can afford multiple weaknesses because other sides have more. There is no role that is truly necessary if we apply your logic universally. 50s England and 60s SA had a 20 averaging pinch blocker as opener which isn't ideal but those guys doubled up as stock bowlers so it worked in the context of those teams. 80s West Indies didn't need a great spinner or a great #6.
Yeah we went over this at length recently. It was kind of ironic because they didn't need one and when they did give Shane Watson a game here and there it actually made the team weaker but it was definitely a case of "we lost this series, Flintoff was really good, we need our own Flintoff". It was completely reactionary and unfortunately doesn't work when you don't have a Flintoff to choose from.For an ATG side, the noughties Australia were more than just a tad desperate to find their own Flintoff straight after the 2005 Ashes.
This should be common senseI guess the consensus is that while you don't always need an allrounder to be a great side (that really depends on how good your specialists are), it is always a great addition to have a good allrounder to any cricket side in any format.
Adam Gilchrist is the all-rounder that the great Aussie team had.Dude . . .
I'll say it again, obviously if you have an all-rounder that makes your team stronger, you should pick them. Obviously both 00s Aus and 80s WI could have been strengthened, in various ways and having a world-class all-rounder could be one of them.
But you do not need an all-rounder for a Test team to be successful, clearly. Aus won 16 Tests in a row twice without one, and picking a substandard all-rounder would have made the team weaker.
Too bad Zimbabwe didn't have a great all-rounder of the same varietyAdam Gilchrist is the all-rounder that the great Aussie team had.
You finally got thereYou don't need any particular strength to make a strong team. It just helps. This is semantics.