His front teeth are a bit too far apart for my liking
My only real criticism of the legend.
You're nuts, Sobers was pimp.
Kaz, have to say I think you're off-base on this one. As has been said, Sobers started his career as a left-arm spinners, developed into a wristie then finally fast-medium pacer. As far as Sobers goes, I think it's pretty fair to say a few things;
1) He was 'good' at all styles of bowling. Had he picked and stuck to one, everyone who saw him bowl and noticed his 'nothing he can't do' attitude would say he probably could have been a great with the ball. That's actually tough to disagree with when you consider the sheer physical ability required to bowl all of those styles of bowling he did to barely Test standard, let alone to take 235 wickets. In no small way that's related to;
2) A bloke who averages damn-near 60 for 90-odd Tests obviously has chosen to give a crap about his batting over and above all else. His bowling was definitely secondary, especially since the WI weren't short of top-class bowlers until late in his career. His primary aim seemed pretty conclusively to be a decent 4th or 5th option behind Griffiths/Hall and Ramadhin/Valentine and others. 20 overs a day in a 4/5 man attack is about right. Andy Symonds gets about as many these days.
If you judge someone purely on the available numbers, Sobers isn't far and away above all other all-rounders. What's clear here is that people often judge Sobers the batsman by numbers but when it comes to bowling, take into account what he could have been had he really put as much effort into his bowling as he did his batting or picked one style and stuck to it. His numbers suffered as a result but just knowing he could do anything makes him a pretty valued member of the attack.
Of course, it then comes down to personal values then; if you value what he 'did' and assume completeness of data collected, then you're not going to rate him as highly as others. If you're the person who values your perception of levels of talent over and above the raw numbers, you're going to rate him highly based on what he did as well as what you think he could have done. It's why so many people rate Mark Waugh as more talented (and a better player) than Steve Waugh despite a rather large gap between their Test averages.
It's just different, not wrong unless you believe stats are the only measure of a player's performance because they're apparently objective. Without going into detail (it's a long discussion......) if you're on that side of the fence, well there's inherent problems which you'd either need to deal with or ignore. I, personally, believe the data collected about the performance of cricketers is smoothed over far too many variables to be a complete measure and use them as more of a guide than anything, hence why arguments about whether a player who has an average of a couple of runs more than another player is better is essentially useless. From that perspective, anyone who uses averages and so forth as their bargaining chip is really making almost as many assumptions about their 'data' as those who go on what they see in a player and perceived levels of talent.