Of course, Miller was a terrific bowler. But Hadlee, Imran and countless other bowlers achieved the same average (I agree Miller's low SR was good for his era) but bowled many more overs per innings and got more wickets per test. I know, he could not bowl enough because of his bad back. But there are many others who did and maintained the same standard despite more workload and that should count. And, 3 wickets a test is not good enough at all for a main bowler. He will always be bowler no.5 in my all-time xi and, hence, his batting is needed to get him in as the all-rounder. If I have 4 bowlers who could manage 20 wickets between them then I wont need Miller and have an extra batsman instead using Sobers to bowl the odd over whenever needed.
Which is why I stated explicitly that his quality was the same as Imran's pretty much. He just didn't bowl as much. Miller doesn't have to be the main bowler, even though he can be. He will be up first change as would someone like Imran who wouldn't be bowled ahead of McGrath or a Marshall. With respect to this, it's negligible. Especially so when you have a spinner, as previously mentioned, with the quality of Warne or Murali. I'd say then there is very little if anything that separates them. But with the bat, there is quite a bit to separate them and again in the field Miller is Imran's superior. So I would keep Miller as my 4th bowler since it'd be a waste to include more. A line-up of Miller, Marshall, McGrath and Warne would be more than enough to take 20 wickets and free up another spot to play a specialist bat.
This thread is not about the argument we are having, though. That is why I voted for Miller and Botham as the greatest all rounders in my book. But please let us not rate him along with imran or hadlee purely as a bowler.
It's not my intention to argue him as good as them purely as a bowler. But the simple fact is that even Imran is inferior to Hadlee and I would say although close, that is distinctly the case. The same thing I would say for Imran and Miller - but with Miller it was not about his quality, rather his quantity.
Why is it questionable? Sobers and Kallis score the same amount of runs. One is interesting to watch and the other one is boring. Why cant this make a difference? Sutcliffe is the highest averaging opener of all time. He averages 9 runs more than gavaskar, 4 more than hobbs and hutton and a whopping 21 runs more than trumper. Still he would barely make the top 5 if players of his ilk were to be ranked. And that is only because he was a dead bat merchant.
As long as the difference made is on aesthetics, that's fine. When you are arguing why one is a better all-rounder or cricketer than the other, I think we are taking aesthetics to mean more than they actually are.
Kallis actually averages less than sobers and he is boring. He should not even be mentioned alongside the great man as a batter alone. Sorry to sound dismissive here. Please dont insult sir gary with these comparisons anymore. he deserves a better treatment at his advanced age. kallis can be compared with sutcliffe, boycott, barrington and dravid. great players all but one plane below the greatest of the greats. that is where he belongs.
Both Kallis' and Sobers' averages are affected by weaker teams in their time. I'd be wary of rating them on their face-value averages. They'd probably average similarly but Sobers stepped up against the best teams of his time and thus puts him on another plane.
Still, as all-rounders, Kallis was probably a bit better than Sobers with his bowling and when the differences are this small you'd expect him to be lauded to the high heavens. If Sobers is undisputed #1 in the eyes of many, you'd think Kallis would be touted as easy 2nd by the same people.