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1. Joel Garner
Joel Garner is a Carribean player, plays for West Indies. He is a right arm fast bowler. He was one of the best bowler in the West Indies team. In ODIs, his toe-smashers made him un-hittable in the demise overs.
He got 146 wickets from 98 games, and is the main player with in excess of 100 wickets to average under 20. His 5 for 29 in the World Cup last in 1979 against England, the best at any point figures in a World Cup last, likewise incorporated a spell of 5 for 4 which shot the hosts out of the challenge.
2. Richard Hadlee
Richard Hadlee is New Zealand player. Hadlee was one of the 5 children of Walter Hadlee and cricket was at that point in his blood. Drafted into the game at an early age, he appeared as a tear away fast and framed a decent pair with his sibling Daryll Hadlee during the 1971-72 season for Canterbury.
With experience, Hadlee cut down on the speed and on second thought pained batsmen with his best bowling activity. He played total 115 ODI matches and took 158 wickets. His best individual bowling figure is 5/25.
3. Shaun Pollock
Shaun Pollock was a part of South Africa team. Pollock was pushed into the captaincy job after the stunning way out of Hansie Cronje when the match fixing bubble burst in mid 2000. Pollock was left to restore a country that was left dispirited and distressed with things that unfolded during the dinky dealings of its recent chief.
He played total 303 ODI matches and and picked 393 wickets. His best individual bowling figure is 6/35. He was considered as one of the best bowler in the South African team.
4. Muttiah Muralitharan
Muttiah Muralitharan is a Sri Lankan Right Arm Spin Bowler. His spinning capability is very dominating. By the grace of God, his bowing arm is design in such a way, that no one can copy his stance. He has a very good economy figure. During his cmODI career he played 350 matches and took 534 wickets, with an economy rate of 3.93.
During his Test career he played total 133 matches and took 800 wickets. He has a best bowling figure of 30/7 in his ODI cricket format. He is one of the most successful bowler in the history of cricket.
5. GLENN Mcgrath
Glenn McGrath is an Australian Right Arm fast bowler. He is considered as a best bowler and carries a record of best figure in the series. In his ODI matches, he played total 250 matches and took 381 wickets and also with a great economy rate of 3.88.
He is also quite impressive in his where he played 124 matches and took massive 563 runs. During his career he was a best bowler in the history of cricket. He has a best bowling figure of 15/7.
6. Ewen Chatfield
Ewen Chatfield is a New Zealand player. Ewen Chatfield was an exact bowler who served New Zealand cricket well during their radiant time of the 80s. An exact bowler, he shaped a very long term association with Hadlee and together they changed New Zealand’s fortunes totally.
His introduction match against England at Auckland was associated with every one of some unacceptable reasons. In ODIs, Chatfield got going amazingly getting 5/34 in just his subsequent match.
This permitted New Zealand to win by three wickets in a match against Australia at Adelaide in 1980. He kept on bowling precisely and in his 114 ODI matches, he got 112 wickets at a normal of 25.84 and with a brilliant economy pace of 3.57.
7. Dennis Lillee
Dennis Lillee is an Australian Cricketer. He is a right arm fast. At the point when quick bowling was at its most extravagant in the whole Cricket history, Dennis Lillee was the man everybody turned upward to. Viewed as the absolute most complete quick bowler, Lillee was one of the critical figures in the Australian set up during the 70s and mid 80s.
He started, as most Australian pacers do, as a tearaway speedy bowler. With an old style side-on activity and a since quite a while ago run up, Lillee was a moment swarm top choice. Watching a truly quick bowler is perhaps the best rush in cricket and watching Lillee in full stream was the apex. He played total 63 matches and took 103 wickets.
8. Malcolm Marshall
Malcolm Marshall is a Caribbean player. Malcolm Marshall crawled to the wrinkle on the point, pitter-pat feet glimmering as though in moving shoes. It was suggestive of a sidewinder on the assault. Idealists incidentally condemned his activity as excessively open, however it had strategy: he kept up with authority of conventional outswing and inswing from an impartial situation without broadcasting his plan.
He was agile, with a fiendishly quick arm that raised him to communicate status. Just in inches was he lacking – yet he even made that advantageous for him with a bouncer surprisingly vindictive, slipping on to the batsman. He played total 136 ODI matches and took 157 wickets.
9. Curtly Ambrose
Curtly Ambrose is a Caribbean player, plays for West Indies. At a stature of six feet seven inches, outfitted with a high arm activity, Ambrose could get the ball to skip at pace. As the years wore on, those flexible wrists were utilized to bowl faultless line and lengths with some crease development.
Ambrose got going his vocation playing top of the line cricket for the Leeward Islands in 1985/86. After this spell, he was given a grant to play club cricket in England. He played total 176 ODI matches and took 225 runs.
10. Michael Holding
Michael Holding is a Jamaican player, plays for West Indies. A tall person with profound eyes, musical approach the wrinkle and a casual bowling activity from the Caribbean islands during the 70s and the 80s flagged only a short stay at the wrinkle for the batsmen. Holding was one of those folks who coordinated with this portrayal.
He was nicknamed Whispering Death by the umpires, the initial segment of the sobriquet came from his quiet way to deal with the wrinkle and the second, came from the final product of his run-up. He played total 102 matches and took 142 wickets.