Ikki
Hall of Fame Member
I'm waiting for that tidbit of logic. Or do you only specialise in one-liners? 50k one-liners, now that's a sad stat.So how come you seem incapable of doing such a thing then?
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I'm waiting for that tidbit of logic. Or do you only specialise in one-liners? 50k one-liners, now that's a sad stat.So how come you seem incapable of doing such a thing then?
The problem is that in different phases of his career,Botham was either too good or too worst at both batting & bowling while Imran remained consistent in one discipline atleast(not to mention in last 10 years of his careers,he was excellent at both batting & bowling).Anway,5 greatest allrounder ever for me are:Yeah he definitely is. Sobers is a batting all-rounder, it just happens that Imran had a better balance.
But the player with the best all-round ability, in terms of batting and bowling, is Botham. You gotta look beyond averages and strike-rates. You gotta look at 100s, 50s, 4-fers and 5-fers. Whilst Khan has little in way of batting and a lot in bowling, Sobers has a lot in batting and little in bowling. But Botham has a very healthy amount in both fields.
And just think what might have been in those first 42 Tests (that's what it was IIRR) had he not been given the captaincy.what Botham really was, more than probably any all rounder maybe since the war, and that includes Sobers, a genuine match winner with both bat and ball.
When he turned it on, he really turned it on .
If you take say the first 50ish tests of his career, when he was at his best (just starting to dip a little with the ball, but still consistantly Englands best wicket taking option), it is mind boggling what he acheived, average basically 39, with 11 100's, including a double hundred (and thats with a dozen tests where he actually didnt do that much with the bat), 230 odd wickets at 23 with 19 five wicket hauls and 4 ten wickets in a match at a strike rate over just over 50 balls per wicket, and lets not forget the 60 catches, many of them top notch spectacular stuff....the acheivements go on really, too many to list.
And again, that is what no-one else has had ceratinly in the last 30 years, probably not since WW2, and probably not ever.
That is why really for the 'all round' all rounder, Botham in those first 5 years is unchallengable
1.Imran Khan
2.Ian Botham
3.Shaun Pollock
4.Keith Miller
5.Gary Sobers
Miller was a better batsman imo, he averaged 50 odd in his FC career, better than a fair few specialist batsmen.I think that Imran was the superior bowler but Miller the better batsman. Not sure if I can split the two.
Whether it was the captaincy that really did it no-one will be ever sure. People have slumps of form, it MIGHT be Botham was due a slumpAnd just think what might have been in those first 42 Tests (that's what it was IIRR) had he not been given the captaincy.
Despite playing a lot of tests as a specialist batsman,Imran has a wkts/match ratio of 4.1 while that of Miller is only 3.0 which shows that Imran was a many times better bowler than Miller.But yes,Miller was the better batsman but the difference between their batting is very minute.I think that Imran was the superior bowler but Miller the better batsman. Not sure if I can split the two.
Graeme Hick also averages 50 in FC Cricket but was crap in tests,so does it make him a better batsman than like Graham Thorpe,Saurav Ganguly ec who don't average 50 in FC cricket?Miller was a better batsman imo, he averaged 50 odd in his FC career, better than a fair few specialist batsmen.
That's very, very simplistic. While Test-cricket is clearly more important, to completely discount First-Class stuff is crazy. It's the same game under the same rules, just one step down.I for one don't give a crap what they averaged in FC cricket, I only look at Test cricket.
How many Tests exactly did Imran play as a specialist-bat? 10 or so at the end of his career (if even that)?Despite playing a lot of tests as a specialist batsman,Imran has a wkts/match ratio of 4.1 while that of Miller is only 3.0 which shows that Imran was a many times better bowler than Miller.But yes,Miller was the better batsman but the difference between their batting is very minute.
it is a significant step down as players like hick and ramprakash demonstrated...That's very, very simplistic. While Test-cricket is clearly more important, to completely discount First-Class stuff is crazy. It's the same game under the same rules, just one step down.
But how can u be sure that it is only because the bowlers were "poor"? Maybe the batting was better at that time, maybe the pitches helped batters.... There are just way too many factors involved here.... I don't think ANYONE can make a correct call on how good/bad Sobers was without having seen him play and without having a fair idea of how good/bad the contemporary players were at that time. I would much rather rely on the rating of him by blokes who played against him at that time and by blokes who were covering cricket at that time than listen to ppl here who have nothing better to go by than just pure stats. And also, everytime one considers using stats, you have to be sure to do a relative analysis of that as well, in the sense that you have to weigh up how player X has done vis-a-vis his contemporaries. Otherwise, there is a great case for Hayden > Vishy and so on.........Um, yeah, there ARE many above average bowlers. Being number 4 doesn't mean anything if the rest are just as poor as you. Very poor strike-rate, very poor average. The only only two factors Sobers has on his side is that he was economical and he was versatile.
Disprove anything I've said with some logic. Not "well I can say X is poor with stats too". Don't worry about X and Y, worry about Sobers. You simply cannot make an argument to exonerate his bowling, when you compare him to others, not on any level.
But for every Hick there are loads of people who performed well at both.it is a significant step down as players like hick and ramprakash demonstrated...