Hey Aussie, will answer your post in total. I dislike the CW posting habit of breaking everything up into little bits, instread of addressing the substance of a post.
Well it depends on the post i guess. Your post here for example i agree with most. But a few things i would want to explain my position much clearer on.
The main reason I queried the inclusion of Imran or Kapil at 6 ahead of Botham was that it seemed you were using Botham's poor record against the WI as an indicator that he was not good enough at no. 6. As I said, the one series at his peak he played against unburdened by the captaincy he did pretty well against them, especially considering that phenomenal SR. I do agree though that it is ambiguous - indeed I stated as much in my earlier post you quoted from the other thread. Hence while the argument that Botham was a weak batsman against the top team of his time can be taken with a grain of salt, its also not certain that he would have done consistently well against them, even at his peak. Reasonably speaking we can never know. My own judgement is that he would have, especially at his peak for he was a genuine middle order batsman - but I can understand why people might query that, and that is fair enough.
One can inversely argue, that even if he wasn't captain in 1980/81, facing the MIGHT of the 4-prong for 1st time he could still failed. But later on in 1984 when he faced them again done better, as he actually did.
If you are going to qualify as an all-rounder in the top 6 for ATXI level. It reckon as a batsman you need to be average or capable of averaging 40+ consistently. Thats why i saw only Sobers, Miller, Procter, Rice, Faulkner & Imran (depening on the balance of the PAK ATXI) qualifies.
Botham even at his 77-84 peak. Only averaged
36 with the bat. I feel more secure with him @ 7 to be fair.
Returning to Imran and Kapil,
its not their overall records I am interested in, but their records against the WI. This I thought was the issue. Hence even in that timeframe of Imran's you linked to, his batting average against them is 27 - certainly not good enough to bat at 6 against the best bowling attacks by your own criteria.
Its overall record & vs WI. With Imran although he averaged only 27 vs WI overall. He still managed to average
40 with the bat during his peak all-rounder days.
But this is where interpretening of stats comes into play. Since even though Imran averaged 40+ compared to Botham's 36, i think its Botham was to more PURE batsman at their respective peaks as all-rounders. Imran batting base on what i've read was just solid but not really attacking. His batting got expansive like Botham after he stopped bowling @ 90 mph after the famous tour to WI 88.
So theirfore due to that solidity thats why i say Imran in more circustances in hypotetical match-ups againts other ATXIs i could bat @ 6 over Botham at their respective all-rounder peaks. But generally both Botham & Imran would bat @ 7.
I have to disagree if you dont think Greig is a good enough batting all-rounder. In such a team he (and Hammond) would be equivalent to 5th bowlers, so there is not as much demand on them as if they had been frontline bowlers. In this respect, Greig's average of 33 with his seamers and spinners is very good.
I dont disagree that Greig would be a quality all-rounder in an ENG ATXI. Just that i dont think his medium pace bowling would be needed given Hammond is there. Using the line-up you chose earlier.
Hutton
Hobbs
Hammond
Compton
Barrington
?
Knott
Larwood
Trueman
Snow
Laker
? - The idea that you suggested in picking a # 6 all-rounder was that the individual can give a top-class spin bowling option to back-up Laker, thus to give you a 5-man attack of variety right?. Greig spin bowling was basically limited to that one performance @ QPR 73/74 & in the sub-continent in the early 70s. It was his medium pace that took the majority of his wickets. Thats why i wont pick him @ 6.
With regard to Stewart, well, as I said, I disagree regarding his keeping. I certainly dont think he was that good behind the stumps, and I dont think he was as good as Gilly or a Sangakkara.
Even if he had been as good as Sanga, let alone Gilly, for a series or two, he would need to exhibit that level over the long haul to really count.
Based on what i saw of Stewart keeping consistently from 96-2003 i would say he was on par with Gilly & Sanga keeping to fast-bowling. The edge i give to Gilly/Sanga over Stewart was their ability to keep to spin, given their work againts Warne & Murali. But the only time in Stewart career he got to keep againts spin on difficult pitches (the acid test for any keeper) in the famous winter tours of 2000/2001 in PAK & SRI. Stewart was very solid.
Similar to Sanga, keeping seems to have had an adverse effect on his batting.
I dont think it has. In test cricket based on my following of SRI cricket, the only reason why he doesn't keep regularly is due to balance of SRI team. They want him to concentrate more on his batting rather than it affecting his batting.
In ODIs he keeps all the time & still bats brilliantly. Now that SRI have that talented all-rounder in Matthews, IF Jayawardene was still skipper. I think Sanga could keep full-time. But now thats he is skipper, the workload of that, plus batting @ 3 would definately be too much. Thats why the current merry-go round with Dilshan keeping is going on.
Even the stats you posted to his keeping and batting between 96 - 03 are a bit out of kilter. Here for example is his record as a keeper/batsmen between 96 - 03 batting at 6:
Code:
Mat Inns NO Runs HS Ave BF SR 100 50 0 4s 6s
20 28 2 927 123 35.65 1849 50.13 1 7 4 122 0
His record from 4 - 7 is marginally better, but only marginally better:
Code:
Mat Inns NO Runs HS Ave BF SR 100 50 0 4s 6s
53 89 11 2860 164 36.66 5735 49.86 4 15 10 392 4
But not by much, and his average against the best team of his time (Australia 96 - 03) is under 35. He was a much better top order batsman.
I dont think you need to necessarily divide up the runs he made @ 6 & 4-7. Stewart was a very versatile batsman. His better record as a top-order batsman to me doesn't say he was DEFINATELY a better top-order batsman TBH (although he had a weakness againts spin which would have affected his middle-order play as it did).
If England had Flintoff in the 90s, i think its very possible that Stewart would have kept more regularly instead of beign rotated around with Jack Russell & averaged close to 40 with the bat.
Hence I dont agree that if England want 5 bowlers they have to pick Stewart. To my mind, Botham fits in neatly, or if his batting is not enough even at peak, then anyone of Greig, Rhodes, Wooley (in that order) who along with Hammond would be good enough to take on 5th bowler duties. Knott certainly was good enough with the bat to hold 7, and if further batting strength is required then Les Ames should be a shoo-in. With respect though, I really dont think Stewart was good enough with the gloves for an AT XI, or as a middle order bat (by your criteria) for an AT XI with the gloves.
I have issues with these 3 for a few reasons.
Firstly, I dont think Rhodes & Wooley qualified as all-rounders to bat @ 6 in the Eng ATXI for reasons i said before.
If you check the stats plus read cricinfo reports, plus if you have any old books, dvd (i would suggest Story of the Ashes). Woolley before the first world-war never transformed that all-rounder performace that he did for Kent at test level consistently.
His one major bowling performance
Oval 1912. Based on reading match reports, seems to be another one of those typical early 1990s uncovered wickets, where spin bowlers ran riot. Such wickets he wont get in hypotetical ATXI matches, so that sort of reduces the effect of his bowling.
Rhodes as i said before. His career had two parts. From 1899-1910 where he was just a top-class spinner. But then from 1911-1914 up until the war he opened & stop bowling. But its confusing, this quote:
cricinfo said:
During the period in which Rhodes and Hobbs opened every England innings by prescriptive right, Rhodes put aside his bowling. In the Australian rubber of 1911-12 he contributed only 18 overs. But then the war came, reducing the Yorkshire attack. In 1919 Yorkshire needed again the spin and flight of Rhodes, so he picked up his bowling arts exactly where years before he had laid them down, picked them up as though he had not lost touch for a moment.
So although technically he never was truly an "all-rounder" at test level. I'm not sure if Sir Wilfred giving up his bowling, was a situation where he did it because it COULD have affected his batting or as the biography say he jus put aside his bowling just like that.
But Looking at the bowlers that where in the England attack during home/away Ashes series in that 1911/12 period.
Barnes
Frank Foster
Harry Dean
Jack Hearne
Johnny Douglas
You would think Sir Wilfred's bowling would have made it better. But based these details, it certainy doesn't qualify him to bat @ 6 in the ENG ATXI as an all-rounder.
On Les Ames. He clearly was a great keeping, but i have issues with his batting like most 1930s batsmen. In that he failed againts the best bowling attack of his time in O'Reilly/Grimmett, more times that he did well againts them. Plus unlike Knott & Stewart he never faced the quality of fast-bowling they faced. So to me batting him @ 6, leaves a too much of question mark. Thats why i have him 3rd in the keeping options pecking order behind Knott & Stewart.
The reasoning i have given for Stewart although controversial. Is more solid that the reasons for Greig, Woolley, Rhodes & Ames to bat @ 6 in the ENG ATXI.
But all are too controversial. Thats why i've been saying its clear ENG ATXI cant afford the luxury of 5 bowlers.