weldone
Hall of Fame Member
Yes, among pure 'batting all-rounders' (whatever that term means), he is...If Sobers is undisputed #1 in the eyes of many, you'd think Kallis would be touted as easy 2nd by the same people.
Yes, among pure 'batting all-rounders' (whatever that term means), he is...If Sobers is undisputed #1 in the eyes of many, you'd think Kallis would be touted as easy 2nd by the same people.
I am not sure I understand your point. By having Miller I can have the best 11 possible. I can pick an all-rounder without wasting a spot in the team for an all-rounder.of course, the idea of a dream team is to have 11 players who would be the best at whatever they do. you dont select anyone who needs a cover. this is not a real situation where you have to compromise.
We are picking an all-rounder, so I pick the best all-rounder. Sobers making the cut as a specialist bat makes him a specialist bat. Not an all-rounder. If one does not want an all-rounder, fair enough. If you do, pick the best one that keeps a balance in the side.miller is not a top 5 batsman nor is he a top 5 bowler of all time. hence he wont make the cut. in fact, in such a team, sobers would have made it to the team as a batter anyway. so there is no need to justify his selection.
And that would mean picking him as purely a specialist bat, and not an all-rounder. That pretty much defeats the purpose of this exercise.and he need not be used as the fifth bowler at all. that is the point of selecting 4 bowlers who could take 20 wickets.
He doesn't have to be, he is being picked on the basis of an all-rounder. Miller's figures show a quality that the best have. I can name 10 bowlers better than Imran, it doesn't mean by picking him I am actually hindering the attack if I am picking him as an all-rounder, because his batting would cover whatever negligible difference he has with the other bowlers.miller cannot lend that balance to a tight bowling attack. he is not among the 5 greatest fast bowlers of all time. there are superior bowlers for one to choose.
I actually think he is the more valuable cricketer as well. Take their per innings performance:he is a great all rounder. i voted for miller in this thread, remember. he is, for my money, along with botham the best all rounder the game has ever seen. but that doesnt make him a more valuable cricketer than sobers.
anyway, ikki, i dont want to stray too far away from the thread anymore.
I don't think anyone is just talking about his batting. I think Kallis is a bit better bowler and then the difference is not that much.Record against the Ws, Ambit and Walsh and McWarne perhaps? You need to perform against the best.. And Sobers only failed against NZ who were not really that much of a force at that point..[/quote
And if you add in the super tests, his stats are even better. And those matches were just as good, if not better, than any tests at that point.
During his peak bowling period from 1980-88, he averaged over 40 with the bat during the same time. And yet you say he was not much better than Hadlee?The issue I have with Imran as a great all rounder was that early on his bowling was outstanding but his batting was not much better than Hadlee's and only slightly better than Kapil Dev's and inferior to Botham's.
They barely played NZ or India and some of them not at all or one or the other. Their figures are hardly inflated by them. In fact, they have a much bigger proportion - like half - of their matches played against their toughest rivals than the Pakistani batsmen did. Anyway, this discussion is silly, the Invincibles batting > Pakistan in the 80s.They had there opportunities with India and New Zealand. 2 out of poor sides for the said team is no where a bigger deal than 1 out of 6 faced by Pakistan.
The point here is that in an all-time XI, the quality difference in his batting and bowling compared to the others is much wider as we are talking about an XI of the best ever in their disciplines. Miller is essentially reduced to a support player rather than a frontline performer. It's like having Chris Cairns in a normal team, sure he is valuable but you would rather have a Shane Bond who can bat or a Martin Crowe who can bowl.I am not sure I understand your point. By having Miller I can have the best 11 possible. I can pick an all-rounder without wasting a spot in the team for an all-rounder.
You seem to maximize the differences in Imran and Miller's batting and reduce the difference in their bowling to make Miller seem a better cricketer. Imran is a lock in any top ten bowlers list (check Wisden's list or our own Cricketweb lists), whereas Miller would be hard-pressed to make the top 30 bowlers of all-time.He doesn't have to be, he is being picked on the basis of an all-rounder. Miller's figures show a quality that the best have. I can name 10 bowlers better than Imran, it doesn't mean by picking him I am actually hindering the attack if I am picking him as an all-rounder, because his batting would cover whatever negligible difference he has with the other bowlers.
Regardless what you think Miller has never been considered an all-time great bowler by pundits and would be an odd fit as a fourth bowler with Marshall, Lillee, Warne, or whoever. You are basing this off purely off his bowling average. No fast bowler with 170 wickets in 55 tests would be considered as such. The fact alone that he wasn't used to bowling longer spells puts doubt over him being able to deliver as a frontline bowler.Miller's bowling is not going to be anymore costly than a Lillee or a Hadlee, really. So why should it matter that he was not a top 5 great bowler? His figures are as good as Imran's. The only downside to his bowling is him regularly bowling longer spells which in an all-time attack is not going to stick out - and if they ever need him to bowl long spells he can do it.
by having a superior fast bowler in place of miller, and there are many options, you can have a better 11. i dont believe miller belongs in any all-time xi and that too as the fourth bowler.I am not sure I understand your point. By having Miller I can have the best 11 possible. I can pick an all-rounder without wasting a spot in the team for an all-rounder.
you are confusing this separate argument we are having with the current poll.And that would mean picking him as purely a specialist bat, and not an all-rounder. That pretty much defeats the purpose of this exercise.
Plenty of people use that argument to justify Imran as the greatest. I still feel Sobers is better though.But people dont think that way. They only think great batting + average bowler = greatest all rounder. Show me one person ever, anywhere, making the argument that players like Hadlee or Imran's great bowling + handy batting make them the greatest all rounder.
I don't have a problem with weighting an individual's skill in one discipline with the other to find his overall impact. For example, Imran was an all-time great bowler + a solid batsman, while Hadlee was a slightly better bowler but no more than a handy batsman. The difference in bowling is minimal, the difference in batting is stark, therefore Imran is a better all-rounder.But in this thread are saying "Sobers is one of the greatest batsman ever and with his 235 wickets he is the greatest all rounder." They are using his batting credentials to strengthen his claim as an all-rounder
But the double standard is that people dont look at a bowler's record and say "Oh, he was great bowler and a handy batsmen therefore he is the greatest all rounder"
There is no superior all-rounder who can bowl though. Picking a superior bowler is essentially not picking an all-rounder at all.by having a superior fast bowler in place of miller, and there are many options, you can have a better 11. i dont believe miller belongs in any all-time xi and that too as the fourth bowler.
Which means by picking Sobers, as you already have 4 bowlers to take 20 wickets, means you are not picking him as an all-rounder because you don't factor him in taking wickets - at least to the team's advantage - with the ball.you are confusing this separate argument we are having with the current poll.
an all time xi needs bowlers who can take 20 wickets. if my four front line bowlers can achieve that i dont need an all rounder. and sobers would make it to the team on his batting strength alone.
That makes completely no sense. What does Miller not have that the others do as a 4th bowler? He is just as cheap and strikes, relatively, as fast. If he bowls as much as them, he'll take about as many wickets as them.if anyone from this bunch of all rounders makes it to the all time xi as one of the four front line bowlers it would be either imran or hadlee.
And you have that, even with Miller in the 4. The difference between a Miller and a Marshall or an Imran is 5 overs per match. So Miller bowls long enough, and for the rest of the attack to cover him they'd only need to bowl 1-2 more overs each per test. And if you have a spinner that difference won't ever be noticed.whereas in an all-time xi i would have four bowlers who would bowl tight, strike quickly and bowl long enough to get the opposition out twice. and all my batsmen would average above 50. a miller or a botham wont be able to fill in either of the requirements. so they wont be there.
hope that covers everything.
No, he wont. miller's SR might have been good for his era. but it is no patch on imran or hadlee's, even relatively. so they would make far far superior bowling options. even from his own era, tyson and trueman struck much quicker than him. lindwall and, even a spinner like, laker had a similar strike rate. so assuming he would take as many wickets as a hadlee or imran is a mistake. it did not happen over 55 tests so it wont happen here. one cant waste the fourth bowling spot on him. he doesnt belong in an alltime xi.If he bowls as much as them, he'll take about as many wickets as them.
the second one is a much better attack. no one needs any cover. all can bowl long spells. all four belong in the top 10 bowlers of all time. great attack actually. replacing imran with miller weakens it considerably.If an attack of Miller, Marshall, McGrath and Warne can't take 20 wickets then the same attack minus Miller, plus Imran, isn't going to either.
Yes, we can agree to disagree. Here's my position summed up:We're simply not going to agree. Here's are my points summed up: Miller's quality in bowling is the same as Imran's pretty much and the difference is his length of time at the crease, which is negligible and can be passed onto all 3 bowlers or just the spinner without it affecting them noticeably, if at all. If ever the situation arises where Miller has to carry the attack, he can also do that. But apart from that, he also gives you more with that bat and in the field too. So it makes 0 sense for me to say he can't be the 4th bowler when he was the 2nd in one of the greatest sides of all-time.
If an attack of Miller, Marshall, McGrath and Warne can't take 20 wickets then the same attack minus Miller, plus Imran, isn't going to either.
That's a poor example IMO. Miller was one of the best bowlers in the world and for half his career also one of the better bats.The point here is that in an all-time XI, the quality difference in his batting and bowling compared to the others is much wider as we are talking about an XI of the best ever in their disciplines. Miller is essentially reduced to a support player rather than a frontline performer. It's like having Chris Cairns in a normal team, sure he is valuable but you would rather have a Shane Bond who can bat or a Martin Crowe who can bowl.
There's also no drop in quality when Miller takes the ball. You do know how to differentiate between quality and quantity right? Miller took less wickets per match because he bowled less, not that he wasn't as good as those who took more.Imran would fit in smoothly with the other bowlers without any real drop in quality the same way Sobers would fit in with the batsmen easily, all while accomadating two all-rounders.
Sorry, you seem to be doing something similar. Maximising Imran's batting and then rate him one of the top 10 bowlers also. He's very good, but a closer glance at his record will show he is inferior to the likes of Hadlee, McGrath, Donald, Ambrose, etc. He has a great record against the WIndies, pummeled Sri Lanka but wasn't fantastic against the rest.You seem to maximize the differences in Imran and Miller's batting and reduce the difference in their bowling to make Miller seem a better cricketer. Imran is a lock in any top ten bowlers list (check Wisden's list or our own Cricketweb polls), whereas Miller would be hard-pressed to make the top 30 bowlers of all-time.
[U]Bowling[/U]:
[B]AVG SR[/B]
[B]Miller[/B]: 22.97 61,5
[B]His Era[/B]: 30.80 80.5
------------------
[B]Imran[/B]: 22.81 53.7
[B]His Era[/B]: 31.92 71.9
That's because being an all-time great is a bit more to than dollars and cents - essentially, runs and wickets. Take Lindwall, who is seen as an all-time great, regardless of era and look at mentionings of both and Miller was right with him. Of course, when you bowl 30 overs a match it will dent your chances of being rated with the top echelon so it's no wonder he isn't spoken in the same regard.Regardless what you think Miller has never been considered an all-time great bowler by pundits and would be an odd fit as a fourth bowler with Marshall, Lillee, Warne, or whoever. You are basing this off purely off his bowling average. No fast bowler with 170 wickets in 55 tests would be considered as such. The fact alone that he wasn't used to bowling longer spells puts doubt over him being able to deliver as a frontline bowler.
No, that's the point; they won't. Quickness and cheapness refers to averages and strike-rate. I've already exemplified; they are basically the same in this regard. Since there are only 20 wickets to take - a fixed number - all it essentially means is that Miller will take one wicket less while one of the other 3 (could be any of them) takes that wicket. It won't come at a greater cost. For when they bowl those extra overs for him, one of those bowlers will take that wicket. If it's Imran, then he will take that extra wicket more because he'd have bowled those overs.An attack of Miller, Marshall, McGrath and Warne can surely take 20 wickets, but replace Miller with Imran and the attack can take them even quicker and cheaper.
It is, even relatively. It's no secret that it was more a batsman's game in that era and the many draws and timeless games illustrate the culture of batting at the time, showing they weren't averse to taking their time.No, he wont. miller's SR might have been good for his era. but it is no patch on imran or hadlee's, even relatively. so they would make far far superior bowling options. even from his own era, tyson and trueman struck much quicker than him. lindwall and, even a spinner like, laker had a similar strike rate. so assuming he would take as many wickets as a hadlee or imran is a mistake. it did not happen over 55 tests so it wont happen here. one cant waste the fourth bowling spot on him. he doesnt belong in an alltime xi.
I disagree that Imran deserves to be in the top 10 bowlers of all-time.the second one is a much better attack. no one needs any cover. all can bowl long spells. all four belong in the top 10 bowlers of all time. great attack actually. replacing imran with miller weakens it considerably.
Except that he's in a side where his peers will be notably ahead of him in either discipline.That's a poor example IMO. Miller was one of the best bowlers in the world and for half his career also one of the better bats.
Except that taking larger bowling loads is part of being a frontline bowler and a leader of an attack. You can speculate that he would have taken more, but that's just that, speculation.There's also no drop in quality when Miller takes the ball. You do know how to differentiate between quality and quantity right? Miller took less wickets per match because he bowled less, not that he wasn't as good as those who took more.
Are you kidding me? Imran was much more than "very good." For much of the 80s he was the best fast bowler in the world. With the passable exception of New Zealand, he averages <25 against all opposition, and that's before you take into account that his average was bloated by acting as a support bowler in his last few years and he hardly was a bowler in the early 70s. His record against the West Indies is superior to any major bowler from his time. To suggest that he doesn't belong in the company with Ambrose, Donald, McGrath, Lillee and others is laughable.Sorry, you seem to be doing something similar. Maximising Imran's batting and then rate him one of the top 10 bowlers also. He's very good, but a closer glance at his record will show he is inferior to the likes of Hadlee, McGrath, Donald, Ambrose, etc. He has a great record against the WIndies, pummeled Sri Lanka but wasn't fantastic against the rest.
I would rather pick a bowler capable of carrying a side over one who cannot. Just to clarify, do you think Miller is a better bowler than Imran?The reason Miller can't be and rightly isn't rated as high is because of his physical impediment. All those top bowlers could make a career out of being a lone-wolf and carry a side whereas Miller couldn't because of the amount he was restricted to bowling - but not the quality.
That's because they are all-time greats in either discipline. Until we find an all-rounder who is an all-time great in both we are stuck with Miller.Except that he's in a side where his peers will be notably ahead of him in either discipline.
What is a frontline bowler? Opening pair? Then Miller was a front-line bowler. I don't understand your point at all.Except that taking larger bowling loads is part of being a frontline bowler and a leader of an attack. You can speculate that he would have taken more, but that's just that, speculation.
Like which parts? Better than Hadlee, Marshall, Garner? I'd like to see that.Are you kidding me? Imran was much more than "very good." For much of the 80s he was the best fast bowler in the world.
That deceptively dodges the point that he is usually in the mid-20s (24) and his SR is usually in the 60s.With the passable exception of New Zealand, he averages <25 against all opposition, and that's before you take into account that his average was bloated by acting as a support bowler in his last few years and he hardly was a bowler in the early 70s.
He is great, and did awesomely against the WIndies. Then again he wasn't so awesome against England, Australia, New Zealand or India. He has one superlative record against the giant of the 80s and then against the rest he is very good but not touching all-time status. His record against Sri Lanka should not need a comment.His record against the West Indies is superior to any major bowler from his time. To suggest that he doesn't belong in the company with Ambrose, Donald, McGrath, Lillee and others is laughable.
If my side was reliant on that choice, then the choice of Imran is a no-brainer. We are talking about the 4th bowler in an all-time XI. So that's not an issue.I would rather pick a bowler capable of carrying a side over one who cannot.
How about the part just after the WSC in 1980 until his shin injury in 1983 when combined extreme pace with complete mastery over conventional and reverse swing to become the best fast bowler in the world? Here's with record in that period:Like which parts? Better than Hadlee, Marshall, Garner? I'd like to see that.
Again, this is just a surface level glance at stats. Against England, this includes tests in 1971 and 1974 when he wasn't even a full-time bowler or batsman. Against Australia and India, this includes the test series in 1989/1990 when he was simply bowling support. When he was a full-time bowler, his stats against all were even more terrific.That dodges the point that he is usually in the mid-20s (24) and his SR is usually in the 60s.
You are either unfamiliar with Imran or follow stats too strictly. Rating Garner ahead of Imran tells me all I need to know. Garner ahead of Imran? Garner never took a 10-fer in his career and only has a handful of 5-fers.IMO, he is probably as good as Wasim, maybe a touch inferior. And even though I rate Wasim very highly, I think most people would leave him out of a top 10.
Just thinking about it, at the top of my head, I'd consider these bowlers superior to Imran: Lillee, Marshall, McGrath, Hadlee, Donald, Ambrose, Lindwall, Warne, Murali, Garner, Holding, Trueman even some earlier ones like Barnes or Tiger. You think any of those names are unfair?
I'd rather go for the better bowling option then give the other three an extra load of work.If my side was reliant on that choice, then the choice of Imran is a no-brainer. We are talking about the 4th bowler in an all-time XI. So that's not an issue.
Ignore my post, posted after you.Was going over the stats in the 80s, and I must say I stand corrected. Imran was pretty awesome in the 80s. Must retract my statement and say he was in the top 10. Very impressive stuff. Overall, probably not in the best handful (top 5) but certainly worthy in a top 10. I was thinking more top 15 before but you can't argue with his performances in the 80s.