Brother, I think that the key word being missed here is context and the meaning of things. Sammy and his fellows aren´t mentioned in the same class Clive Lloyd and his team primarily because of these guys having never won an ODI World Cup. You say that teams and players are defined by Test cricket and "Also a bit by the ODI World Cup." That´s where I firmly disagree! That is the ultimate prize in cricket. T20 World Cup victories haven´t yet reached that level of recognition, true, but you can´t be dismissing a global event just as "luck" and "chance". You provided a comparison, let me also provide comparison. Do you really think that a meaningless Test century scored by an Indian batsman against England holds the same value as the 12-ball fifty by Yuvraj? No cricket pundit from even England would agree! Do you think that any innings from this year´s Sri Lanka-West Indies series will ever be viewed same as Samuels´ unbelievable innings from the World T20 Final 2012? No! And we both know it. Going forward, see that Kohli has won a Test series even in Antarctica I think, but does anyone cricket pundit from any country talk him up as much as Dhoni was as a captain? Why? The lack of ICC trophies! I don´t think that Sri Lanka under Ranatunga were any world-beating force in Test cricket, but he still has made himself a name in cricket history, and no cricket pundit would, in his sane mind, rate Kohli higher than him. Graeme Smith´s Test team doesn´t get the same mention either, as do many ODI World Cup winning teams. Had it been the case, their name would´ve been "World-beaters" or something, instead of "chokers". Also, for example, all experts and fans around the globe mention the memorable match where South Africa chased down 434, but nobody actually mentions that Australia whitewashed them 3-0 in the Test series that followed. From amongst players for example, Michael Bevan has more of a name in cricket history than, let´s say, Jonathan Trott. Now, in return, you too would give me examples, like you did of Sammy and his fellows, and we would never stop going round in circles, whereas context is the key word. Remember also that cricket is evolving as a game, what´s most meaningful right now may lose much value 50 years down the line. So, my point is that there´s no white or black line to follow on this to settle this issue. After watching such a high-voltage sSmi-Final between Pakistan and Australia, an absolutely draining experience, the last thing would be a cricket fan telling me two weeks from hereon that he´s finally watching "Real cricket" now, that being a Test match between Sri Lanka and New Zealand or whatever. Again, "context" is the key word.
Now, as for England, I would simply refer to my earlier post from this thread itself to explain once again as to why they´re separate from other teams......
I rest my case.