There is this wonderful piece that Cardus wrote for The Guardian after watching Sobers play for the Rest of The World XI at Lord's where he took 6 for 21 in 20 overs, and then scored 183. In England's second innings, he took another two wickets for 43 runs in 31 overs.
In an interesting article, Cardus, while acknowledging Sobers as a genius, does not think he was the greatest ever, opting for those from earlier eras and also plays down Sobers bowling skills in comparison with specialist bowlers.
The great Neville Cardus on Sobers
The wonderful Garry Sobers, most easily masterful of batsmen, delights at one and the same time artists and statisticians, stroking the ball with a bat apparently itself alive, sensitive and powerful in turn. Also a cricketer who can use the new ball dangerously and, again, with an appeal to the watcher's love for rhythm, effortless of motion; for Sobers, when he runs to bowl, is relaxed until the swing over the left arm, then the accumulation of energy is quite the musical crescendo.
His all round performances in the England v Rest of the World match at Lord's must count amongst the most distinguished of all batsman-bowler achievements. He can done everything a cricketer can hopefully envisage. And Sobers can be two contrasted bowlers, a seamer of guile, not mechanical, and a back of the hand spinner of leg breaks and googlies.
At Lord's last week while Illingworth and Knott resisted the Rest of the World attack more or less untroubled from half-past eleven to lunch, I said to myself, 'Gary could get Illingworth out in a few balls, if he bowled his slow spin,' which he did, as soon as he tried putting the gallant workmanship of Illingworth under a spell.
Is Sobers the greatest of all-round cricketers ever? This is an uncritical and rather vain question. Performance in any calling of life, is related to environment, to the material pressures which, to some extent, 'condition' even genius. Maybe Sobers could have coped with the terrible sticky wickets which Victor Trumper conquered triumphantly in 1902, against some of the finest spinners in cricket's history. But we can not measure genius with genius; you can not try to place a Mozart above a Beethoven, a Bach above a Schubert. Each is an absolute. It is only mediocrity that we can put into the scales, pricing So-and-So sixpence or so more saleable than - Never Mind.
A test of a great all round cricketer is this; would he be picked to play in a Test match for his batting only or for his bowling only (good fielding of course being taken for granted)? Sobers, as bowler, does not day-by-day run through a side. He has, for all the cricket hen takes part in, never approached Woolley's all-round excellencies of 1921-22-23, when in consecutive summers, he scored 2101 runs, with 167 wickets, 2033 with 163 wickets and 2091 with 101 wickets. And for all my admiration for Sobers as batsman, I do not rank him more technically accomplished, or more aesthetically satisfying than Woolley over many years. As I say, we should not try to weigh genius in balance - but I didn't start it. The cry has long since been heard,'Gary, the greatest ever.' Let us be grateful to enjoy and admire him for what he is, as cricketer and purveyor of delight.
If we could match him in a single wicket game what would be the odds on him to beat Keith Miller, Wally Hammond, Aubrey Faulkner? Would he be selected for representative cricket purely as a bowler; I am not at all certain that Keith Miler was not the most dangerous all round cricketer of our 'modern' times.
We can not drag into this argument of comparative values W.G. Grace who in his career took 2876 wickets and scored 54,904 runs. AS a bowler, he exploited highly tossed slow balls. He placed a fields-man at deep fine leg, then sent the batsman an inviting ball to leg - inviting him to hit the ball into the said long-leg fields-man's hands. One day, a University young batsman declined to fall into the obvious booby trap. He simply patted down the tempting full tosses for safe singles to leg, whereat Grace cried out; ' Young feller, if you keep on doin' that, I'll take myself off.'
The there was George Hirst's all-round magnificence of 1906 - 2385 runs and 208 wickets. He was asked at the end of the season if he thought the dual feat would ever be equalled. He replied,'Whoever does equal it will be tired.' Would Hirst be chosen for a Test match purely as a bowler or batsman? I doubt it; he inexplicably failed, except for one famous occasion, to do himself justice in Test matches.
It is a fascinating question - Sobers or Hammond, both miraculous slip fieldsmen, both dangerous bowlers with a new ball; but Hammond seldom put his heart in his bowling. At the pinch, at Adelaide in 1937, he took fivr for 57, on a flawless wicket with no atmosphere to help him. as helped Sobers at Lord's. And Hammond's victims included Bradman, caught and bowled 212. It was during this match that I asked Bill Voce which was the best ball to bowl to Bradman; and woefully he answered.'There is no ruddy ball to bowl at the Don.'
At Lord's in 1957, I stood in the Long Room watching Sobers batting. With me was S F Barnes, in his 85th year. After close inspection of Sobers, Barnes said, 'He likes flicking at the off side ball. I think I could get him out.'
'How?' I inquired.
I'd pitch him one on the leg stump going away.'
Then to draw him, I asked,' and what about Bradman?'
He replied unhesitatingly, " I'd have to bowl my best to get him out.' but the implication was that he could have.
But this Sobers is, in many ways, beyond compare, I fancy that, with the aid of Proctor and a wicket keeper, he could himself defeat the England XI on view the other day at Lord's. Not one player in the England team could have got a place in the Rest of The World XI, which is a solemn or ironical thought.