honestbharani
Whatever it takes!!!
Sobers played as a batting allrounder in the initial part of his career. Of this, there is very little doubt. He was always the 4th or 5th bowling option and was mostly required to do the stock bowler's work.. After that, he took up fast medium and started taking his bowling that bit more seriously when they were short on that type of bowling and became good at it.Unfortunately, my cricket history is not great, but I offer a couple of points.
- Sobers must have been extraordinarily talented to bowl all different styles of bowling to Test standard, but...
- Does this not mean that he always bowled something which the pitch supported, and for this reason, wouldn't his bowling average be seen as 'lower' than a bowler who had one art of Sobers' ability.
Then, when the other pace bowlers came in once again, he started being the stock bowler again.
Honestly, one has read so much about Sobers bowling seam up into the wind, bowling quick, flattish SLA and stuff just to keep the batsmen tight while the bowlers from the other end attacked that I would be extremely shocked if it was anything less than the absolute fact...
It is not like Sobers got the new ball when the pitch was lively and was asked to bowl chinamen or fingerspin when it was turning square. He was a back up to the 4 specialists they picked, not vice versa. If he was in my team and I had the likes of Kumble and Saqlain (at his peak) on a turner, I would only ask him to bowl medium pace with the new ball and also bowl against the wind giving control over the batsmen while my specialists attack from the other end...
That and the fact that he was such a good batsman that he almost always had batted for a reasonable time and therefore could get tired bowling half of what most specialist bowlers would have bowled..