We haven't got a replacement for User, so I'll just mark him absent and we move on!
My 2 picks...There was 2 bowlers I really liked, but I'm only going to pick one of them:
Sir Alec Bedser. My other pick is a guy I wanted from the start, but wasn't sure when to pull the trigger. He doesn't really have a lot of Ashes runs, but he's certainly worthy of recognition in my view: the tragic story of
Archie Jackson.
Archie Jackson
Ashes stats
Tests: 4
Runs: 350
Average: 58.33
High Score: 164, Adelaide, 1928/29
Best Series: 1928/29 - 4 innings, 276 runs @ 69.00, 1 century, the aforementioned 164.
Archie Jackson is literally an Ashes legend, because we have no idea how good a player he could have become. Jackson was dead at just 23 years old, tuberculosis ending the life of the promising opener. He was an attacking player, a stylist who loved to play with a flourish of the wrists. He was a true crowd pleaser, playing all the shots with an easy grace, and a friendly smile that made him the favourite of many.
Jackson was a contemporary of Bradman. They were continually compared to each other, as both were young New South Wales batsmen of great talent. Bradman was one year older than Jackson, but Jackson made the NSW team first, debuting at 17 - a sign of how good Jackson was. They both debuted for Australia in the same 1928/29 Ashes series (Bradman in the 1st Test, Jackson in the 4th). In Jackson's first Test he struck a brilliant 164, riding out the storm as Australia lost 3/19 to start the innings. His innings was heavily praised, for not offering a chance, but primarily for playing his shots without fear of the situation, and playing with some elegance and style.
Sad to say, but this was the high point of Jackson's career - at a mere 19 years of age. He and Bradman continued to England on the 1930 tour, but there the careers of the two prodigies diverged. while Bradman put together the greatest batting series in cricket's history, Jackson struggled with the colder English weather, poor health and a loss of form.
Before that 1930 tour, it wasn't hard to find pundits who thought Jackson was the better player of the two, and it boggles the mind to imagine how England might have been cursed to deal with Bradman AND a player of similar quality. Sadly, it was not to be. After the 1930 tour, his cricket career moved in stops and starts as his health fluctuated. He even moved to Queensland to try and find some warmer weather, but his body wasn't destined to last.
Check out this story on Cricinfo - it contains Harold Larwood's glowing foreward to David Frith's book on Archie Jackson, and a bit of Frith's book itself that captures the legend of Archie Jackson:
The Archie Jackson story | Cricket Features | Wisden Cricket Monthly | ESPN Cricinfo
And this clip shows rare footage of Jackson's famous Adelaide innings. There's not much and it's that's hard to see, but there's also a nice discussion by Mike Coward and David Frith about Jackson. Go to about 3:25 onwards to the first mention of Jackson.
1 Archie Jackson
2 Wilfred Rhodes
3 Sir Donald Bradman (c)
4 Ken Barrington
5
6
7 Monty Noble
8
9 Jim Laker
10 Sir Alec Bedser
11
More details on Alec Bedser when I've got a bit more time!