Why Courtney Walsh should be regarded as more than just another West Indian bowling great

While we remember the likes of Marshall and Ambrose for their unique traits, Walsh’s legacy remains nebulous. It shouldn’t be

Andrew Fidel Fernando29-Aug-2020Come to Think of itOkay, so what is to follow is not exactly revisionist, because who is going to argue that Courtney Walsh is not great? But beyond that, what would you say about him? Andy Roberts was ferocious, Malcolm Marshall was astute, Joel Garner was accurate, Michael Holding was smooth, Curtly Ambrose was scary, but Walsh?The last keeper of that incandescent fast-bowling torch that was lit in the 1970s? Sure. Sometime captain, and all-time comedy batsman? Absolutely. But he deserves more than this, right? A closer look at the contours of his career, a microscope run over his numbers – this is what we are aiming for.ALSO READ: Alan Gardner: Is county cricket unfairly maligned?To start with, perhaps it’s important to take stock of why Walsh’s legacy has been mired in this relative nebulousness. Perhaps it is because although he had plenty of height, pace, smarts and control, and could generate prodigious seam movement, none of these virtues defined him. Or at least, none defined him to the extent that they defined another great West Indies bowler. (It cannot have helped that for the majority of his career, he was partnered by Ambrose – arguably the most intriguing and magnetic of all.)Where Walsh pulled ahead of the pack, however, was through his durability, playing 133 Tests over 16 years and a bit. In truth this is among the most useful characteristics for a quick, but unfortunately, also one of the least sexy. Still, his 519 Test wickets represent a 28% increase on the tally of Ambrose, who is the next best on the West Indies charts. And unlike Ambrose, Walsh claimed a significant majority of his wickets away from home – 56%. Walsh’s away tally is greater than the career tallies of Holding, Garner and Roberts. (More on Walsh’s away record later.)