Cabinet96
Hall of Fame Member
Yeah, I should've clarified that he was mainly talking about how they're perceived by fans. Shane Watson is a pretty good example of someone who fans like to joke about but he was really not that far away from being a superstar in tests.This is certainly how your average cricket fan tends to think of all-rounders but I really don't think it's true at all. There's tons of middling all-rounders who are decent contributors, usually in one field moreso than another, without being world beaters. It just seems more extreme because a player who is genuinely good at two disciplines is so influential that they really stand out, and when they don't do well they tend to be given much more time in the side than a one discipline player who is failing, since they can keep their position by performing in another discipline, like Marsh has been doing to a degree with the ball (and potential, I guess).
But they seem to provoke the most extreme reactions from supporters. If you asked the average English cricket fan who their best cricketer of the last 15 years was I'd imagine Flintoff would get more mentions than anyone else when his record really isn't that special, he just had a period of his career where he was exceptional, and you'd get the opposite reaction from Australians with Watson but again, he had some pretty good periods where he was one of the better contributors in the team.