Flintoff was a talisman in a way that Kallis, Shakib, Cairns and Pollock couldn't match, and you can't measure that statistically
Cairns was every inch the talisman of our side. When Cairns was batting or bowling, there was hope, and imo he was a better allrounder than Flintoff, though it is close. Neither compare to Botham of course.
Cairns was so much more than his statistics, which if you remove his early crap (similar to Freddie in this aspect I guess) are actually pretty impressive regardless. Something like 40 with the bat and 27 with the ball or something over a much longer time period than Flintoff's peak. Who cares, because this is a man who could bat at four on merit if our batting was more ****ed than usual and then turn around and open the bowling. This is a man who played major roles in some of the most influential series in New Zealand folklore, including series victories in England and the drawn series against the great Australian side. On his day the best batsmen and bowlers in the world had no answer to him. Warne once applauded him smacking him for six because the shot was just so ridiculously good.
I know Flintoff will be remembered more by those outside New Zealand for his role in the Ashes, and that series is the Aston Martin to tests against New Zealand's Toyota Corolla, but Cairns can't control his country of birth, and for me he is the best of the next tier down from the greats.
And I won't hear a word against Shakib either. He isn't as good as Flintoff or Cairns yet because he's only played 30 odd tests, but that bloke is a ****ing hero. Never has one player been so instrumental to the performance of his team. He is the true successor to John R. Reid, and imo will outdo him.
Saying Vaas is a better allrounder than Flintoff is hilarious though. He's a better bowler, but the bloke isn't even as good as Pollock or Hadlee with the bat ffs.