Although on the surface it is difficult to compare the long-term excellence of Walsh with the shorter — and at times more explosive — careers of many of his compatriots, perhaps it is worthwhile putting their numbers on a more equal footing by comparing the most lethal streaks in each of their careers. For Walsh, his best 150-wicket stretch brought dismissals at an average of 20.35. This is not as good as the averages of Marshall (the clear leader by this and many other measures), Ambrose and Garner during the best 150-wicket sequence in careers, but better than for Holding, Roberts and Ian Bishop.ALSO READ: Karthik Krishnaswamy: Was Shoaib Akhtar’s talent overshadowed by his sagas?Where for every other bowler on the chart below, the most productive periods came towards the start or the middle of their careers, Walsh’s best years were actually his last few. His best 150-wicket streak didn’t start until his 92nd Test, and stretched until his 122nd. Where James Anderson, the most prolific late-career fast bowler in history, took the vast majority of his wickets at home, Walsh was taking big hauls all around the world through the final phase of his career, while also playing ODIs. The most successful year of his career was actually 2000 (when he turned 38), which brought him 66 wickets at 18.69.

Where Walsh comes into his own and breaks emphatically into all-time territory, however, is with his performances outside the Caribbean. No fast bowler in history has claimed as many away wickets as Walsh. Glenn McGrath is second, with 274 away wickets. James Anderson — the most successful quick bowler in history — is sixth on this list, with only 36% of his dismissals having come away from home. Among the ten quicks to have taken over 200 away wickets, Walsh’s average of 25.03 and strike rate of 57 are worse than those of Marshall, Ambrose, Hadlee, and McGrath, but he is in the company of Wasim Akram and Waqar Younis, and well ahead of the more recent operators — Anderson and Zaheer Khan.

Typically for Walsh, it is also possible that the feather in his statistical cap is a narrative altogether unexplored. In Asia — the continent that has traditionally been the most difficult for quicks — Walsh was arguably the best touring fast bowler ever; his average of 20.53 (across 76 wickets) and strike rate of 45 are only (slightly) worse than the numbers of Wes Hall, who took 54 wickets on the continent in the era of uncovered pitches. Marshall and Dale Steyn — both of whom also dominated in Asia, and whose records there are the jewels in their crowns — have significantly higher Asia averages than Walsh, though Steyn’s strike rate is better. Walsh was especially good in India and Pakistan — the two best Asian sides for much of his career — taking four wickets or more on ten occasions, across 29 innings in those countries.

So while Walsh is in the middle of the great West Indies pack across many measures, this is perhaps his area of clear distinction. In the four Tests West Indies won in Asia during his career (they lost seven and drew six), he took 21 wickets at an average of 16.04. His best performances in victories came perhaps in the Lahore Test of 1986, when his seven wickets helped West Indies blow an outstanding Pakistan side away; and the Delhi Test of 1987, in which he took five wickets in the second innings to set up a series-defining victory. His five wickets in Mohali in 1994 — and his nasty lifter to break first-innings centurion Manoj Prabhakar’s nose — also prevented the breaking of West Indies’ long, unbeaten series streak going back to 1980. The next year, Australia would finally bring the West Indies’ dynasty to a close.When West Indies went into sharp decline in the years after that, Walsh only raised his game.Come to Think of it

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