I fully understand what you are saying re Hobbs and Imran. Akram is interesting though, the guy made the cricinfo and Wisden all time teams, that's insane. Though it's possible they were factoring in all cricket and were influenced by his odi exploits.
Back on topic, Hobbs was a giant. He (as well as imran) makes my honorary, official 11. But the criteria for my other team is that if invited to a training camp and I got to see them all, the players that I believe would be best suited to win on the field. The very best, don't think there is any doubt that was Richards. Hobbs played in a time with different rules, the lbw one being the most obvious one. There are other concerns, but I'm just not sold that he woukd be as successful or proficient as Hutton and Richards who would also complement each other perfectly.
The bowling is tricky. I'm sold as Marshall, McGrath and Steyn and being the three best. Of the all genuine frontline bowling all rounders, Imran was the best bat, Hadlee the best bowler (But so similar to McGrath) and Proctor the most potential.
On a separate note. I earlier referenced my three way player to make the squad and I selected Kallis by a hair over Chappell and Hammond. By chance watched 2 hours of WSC cricket last night. Hard to choose Kallis over Chappell. Still not sold on Greg's bowling (compared to Kallis) but he was tidy enough, peerless in the cordon and just an amazing bat, that's a difficult decision. The vid also was a brilliant reminder how absolutely gun young Viv was at the crease and surprisingly at 3rd slip. Not quite in that absolute top tier (Simpson, Chappell, Sobers, Hammond, Mahela, Waugh, Hooper etc but just below). Damn.
With regards to your comments regarding McGrath and Hadlee. Yes they were similar types of bowlers with similar career numbers and I do concur that Hadlee is criminally under rated by the larger cricketing community. But I do give McGrath the slight edge because he did it in much more batting friendly conditions. So I still go with McGrath first. At least one of the bowlers can be chosen for that primary role alone and I can forgive and make allowance my no. 11 for not being handy with the bat. I totally get you argument though and see how having Hadlee over McGrath automatically solves the no. 8 and corridor bowler problem in one go. I also try to have guys from different eras and see McGrath and Maco as an unbeatable opening combination.
Lillee started a trend. Marshall continued it. The best bowlers of all time were the most complete. Akram was even more complete, and looked so good doing it. Ambrose-mcgrath-steyn showed something different. Pick the most effective thing. Repeat. Don't mix it up much. Akram didn't figure this out and wasn't particularly effective.
He's a leftie, can go round the wicket and offers something with the bat, which is a big deal. And he offers reverse, which almost nobody had got right before him and was a massive plus, almost a reason by itself to pick him. But reverse is better understood. And there is the is the fact that Imran and Steyn are two of the 3 greatest reverse bowlers ever, with so much else to recommend them on.
Anyway, he's legitimate. Balance counts. Just not for me.
Hobbs is the 3rd greatest bat ever in my mindl, clearly. But WG isn't making it, and Hobbs deserves a rethink. I figured he played so long, across eras and conditions that he was ok. But your logic is good and I'm kicking him out. I actually remember you and someone else from reading through this thread a few years ago because I liked your logic a couple of times, so this isn't a first.
I'm not sure about his partner. It's hard to see how Barry would end up wrong, but I'm not sure. And if I do I will want to put g Pollock and Procter in and have a whole team of question marks.
Kallis is underrated. My opinion of him just keeps climbing. Faultless slip to pace until the very end of career, when he was merely excellent. You need someone agile against spin though. I feel like he's probably the second best bat of his era. This still puts him behind Chappell, who is probably behind Hammond if the era is disregarded (why?). IDK much, but.he is as much of a part timer as Chappell until proven otherwise to me.
You never want to see a part timer as your 5th.
You will seldom need overs from a 6th. Variety always helps. If you can find the space.
Kallis went though a whole lot of phases as a bowler with different responsibilities where he aquired or leaned on a different skillset. Pick any bowler and you will find a couple of things that they either can't do at all or you would rather have him do. But he really just did a couple of things at a time. Can't average him out. Can't allow him his career skillset-he isn't an ATG. If there is a way to pay him some dues instead of representing him as a statistically teribble bowler, he deserves a spot