Cairns was better than several of those players.I go: 1. Sobers 2. Imran 3. Hadlee 4. Kallis 5. Miller 6. Botham 7. Procter 8. S. Pollock 9. Kapil 10. Shakib 11. Faulkner 12. Mankad 13. Jadeja 14. Flintoff 15. Goddard
I knew I was forgetting someCairns was better than several of those players.
Khan was an all rounder just look at his stats. You’re being silly. You can bat any position and still be an all rounder.Miller is the only genuine allrounder amongst them. Hadlee was not a batsman at all, though a useful hitter at 7 or 8. Imran was only a number 7 or 8 during his prime years as a bowler. Most of his record as a batsman is due to becoming a dogged accumulator of runs late in his career.
If you insist on statsmongering instead of watching cricket you should know that he averaged over 50 over the last handful of years at a time when he wasn’t the main strike bowler. For most of his career he had the record of a useful number 7 or 8. As Pakistan captain you carry the weight of the world on your shoulders, but one thing he didn’t carry was the role of a genuine Test all rounder.Khan was an all rounder just look at his stats. You’re being silly. You can bat any position and still be an all rounder.
jadeja ****ing lol. **** can do something away from home first.As overall cricketers,
1.Sobers
2. Imran
3. Hadlee
4. Kallis
5. Miller
6. Pollock
7. Botham
8. Kapil
9. Jadeja
10. Shakib
As all rounders,
1. Sobers
2. Imran
3. Kallis
4. Miller
5. Botham
6. Kapil
7. Hadlee
8. Pollock
9. Cairns
10. Shakib
All rounders need to perform with the bat and the ball at the same time - something Imran most definitely did not do.Khan was an all rounder just look at his stats. You’re being silly. You can bat any position and still be an all rounder.
That's simply not true. In the four calendar years between 1980 and 1983, Imran took 134 Test wickets @ 16.35 and also averaged over 45 as a batsman with multiple test centuries.All rounders need to perform with the bat and the ball at the same time - something Imran most definitely did not do.
Just because someone bats at 7 or 8 doesn't necessarily mean they are not a genuine all rounder. During Imran's peak years as a bowler, he was averaging mid 40s with the bat, which is good enough to justify genuine all rounder status in anyone's book.Miller is the only genuine allrounder amongst them. Hadlee was not a batsman at all, though a useful hitter at 7 or 8. Imran was only a number 7 or 8 during his prime years as a bowler. Most of his record as a batsman is due to becoming a dogged accumulator of runs late in his career.
Averaging over 45 sounds good till you realise that in 25 Tests he scored 1176 runs - hardly a heavy workload.That's simply not true. In the four calendar years between 1980 and 1983, Imran took 134 Test wickets @ 16.35 and also averaged over 45 as a batsman with multiple test centuries.
This sort of makes out like he was sometimes a good batsman and sometimes a good bowler when he of course is actually one of the best bowler ever.Averaging over 45 sounds good till you realise that in 25 Tests he scored 1176 runs - hardly a heavy workload.
Imran rarely, if ever put together a series where he had to put in a considerable effort with the bat whilst also having a considerable workload with the ball - it was either one or the other and that to me is not an all rounder. It's a very valuable cricketer but if you compare it to others who actually did perform with both disciplines at the same time, he comes up short.