Some of you guys spend half of your lives on a cricket forum, and you can't even get the basics right. Wasim Akram was not selected in the Cricinfo World XI as an all-rounder, because nobody in their right mind would select him in that role. He was chosen as a pure bowler, because that is what he was: a fast bowling genius who became one of the greatest bowlers the world has ever seen. Garry Sobers was chosen as the all-rounder
by a unanimous decision, while Malcolm Marshall, Wasim Akram, Dennis Lillee, and Shane Warne were the four bowlers selected, by large margins. Anybody who has a massive problem with that bowling attack, is a serious imbecile.
Very rarely have I watched a cricketer who received universal acclaim throughout his career and come away with the impression - "Nah, he was overrated.". So why should it be any different with Sobers?
I'd be interested to know from people who were avid cricket followers at the time - when Imran retired (and presumably the accolades and tributes were flowing), how many renowned cricket experts were willing to declare him the best allrounder ever?
No one that I can remember at the time. It was felt he was one of the great four ARs of his era and there was a lot of argument which one was the best, but clearly all of them were rated behind Sobers
This is an excellent point. I saw Imran Khan play, and have no doubt that he was a champion. But, when he retired, there was virtually nobody who declared him to be the greatest all-rounder ever. It wasn't even set in stone, that he was the greatest all-rounder of his own generation. He was one of the four premier all-rounders of the 70s and 80s, but there was never any concrete agreement, as to who was the best of them.
So, it seems a little ridiculous that people who didn't even see him play,are now trying to engage in some sort of revisionist history, trying to anoint him as the greatest all-rounder ever. Trust me, if he really was that good, there would have been a plethora of cricket legends and esteemed journalists, lining up to declare him as the second greatest cricketer in history. But, that simply did not happen.
When Wisden named their five greatest cricketers of the 20th century, they surveyed 100 people, including cricket historians, renowned journalists, and champion players, to get an accurate cross-section of the cricket community. Imran Khan received 15 votes, and Garry Sobers received 90 votes. Of those 100 people surveyed, there were 11 each from Pakistan and the West Indies, so you can safely assume that all, or most of their
countrymen, would have voted for Khan and Sobers, respectively.
So basically, of the remaining 89 neutral voters, only 4 or 5 voted for Imran, and 79 voted for Sobers. When any logical human being looks at this incredibly lopsided result, they come to one very obvious conclusion: If Imran Khan really was the equal of Garry Sobers, then why aren't those numbers closer together?