Migara
International Coach
Imran is better than Sobers.I'm starting to think Imran pushes Sobers. He would have in opinions of pundits if he played for Australia or England.
Imran is better than Sobers.I'm starting to think Imran pushes Sobers. He would have in opinions of pundits if he played for Australia or England.
I dunno. Sobers at 86 has a lot less controversy surrounding him than Imran at 69.Imran is better than Sobers.
Procter Better Batsman, and Far Better Fielder.?Imran's just Procter but he achieved one level higher.
Like, I rate Procter and I do realise who I'm talking to, but - really?
Its why people are jealous of him.Imran at 69.
Only if he has a messy accident at the rest home.Sobers still has a chance to disgrace himself politically I guess
Miller's batting > Kallis' bowling, while their stronger suits are about equal for me so;I would go with Sobers > Imran > Kallis > Miller.
I would also go with that ranking but not because of this statistical reasoning.On the topic of who is the best ever, Sobers, Imran, Kallis and Miller are generally regarded as the 4 greatest all rounders ever.
Here are some stats which give some interesting insights. Stats without context admittedly.
Batting average to bowling average ratio
Sobers - 1.6979
Kallis - 1.6959
Imran - 1.6523
Miller - 1.6095
Runs per match * wickets per match
Sobers - 218.23
Imran - 177.96
Miller - 166.23
Kallis - 140.82
Sobers is regarded by most as the best allrounder is history for a good reason. He didn't just had a great gap between batting and bowling averages, he also impacted matches to a higher degree than others with more runs and wickets at the quality we are talking here.
I would go with Sobers > Imran > Kallis > Miller.
Nah McGrath was better..Hadlee and McGrath are very, very hard to separate.
Care to explain how Imran is a level above Miller when their records are basically the same except for the fact Miller lost around 6 years to the war?I would also go with that ranking but not because of this statistical reasoning.
Both Sobers and Imran were top tier ATGs in one discipline and test class in their second. Miller and Kallis were a level below that status in bowling and batting respectively IMO.
Same averages doesnt mean same records. Imran's record as a bowler is that of a top tier ATG, Miller's is not, either in terms of wicket output, SR, etc. Which is why he was ranked outside the top 20 on CW's pace bowlers list.Care to explain how Imran is a level above Miller when their records are basically the same except for the fact Miller lost around 6 years to the war?
Who knows what Miller's Test batting record would have ended up looking like and if not for those lost war years, considering he averaged close to 50 in FC cricket.
Miller not quite being in the top tier of ATG bowlers is fair. He was rarely the best bowler on his own team, let alone the world. His average is extremely good but his bowling workload was less than most greats (not unreasonable for an allrounder with back troubles) so he only took 3 wickets per Test. He'd generally bowl with the new ball but only sparingly otherwise. Lindwall and Bill Johnston were both taking more wickets than him playing in the same team. His bowling record doesn't stack up when compared with someone as incredible as Imran.Care to explain how Imran is a level above Miller when their records are basically the same except for the fact Miller lost around 6 years to the war?
Who knows what Miller's Test batting record would have ended up looking like and if not for those lost war years, considering he averaged close to 50 in FC cricket.
Record-wise, little to nothing to separate them.Nah McGrath was better..
I would say Miller's SR of 60 something was a product of the times he was bowling. The best in the business were striking in the same ballpark. It is his wickets per match which is arguably shaky. I remember having some lengthy debates with TJB at some time on this topic. That said, he was pretty damn good against the opposition's best batsmen. Was involved in some great duels against Hutton.Same averages doesnt mean same records. Imran's record as a bowler is that of a top tier ATG, Miller's is not, either in terms of wicket output, SR, etc. Which is why he was ranked outside the top 20 on CW's pace bowlers list.
Except when it is about Imran's batting or when it suits your bias, I guess..Same averages doesnt mean same records
Record-wise, little to nothing to separate them.
2022 should be the peak of his career....given the playboy that he is.Imran at 69
Except that I readily admit Miller is a better bat than Imran despite averaging less.Except when it is about Imran's batting or when it suits your bias, I guess..
Or, I guess.........
I just wonder when posters try to compare Miller and Imran as bowlers if they really do rate Miller that highly or are just trying to knock Imran down a peg.I would say Miller's SR of 60 something was a product of the times he was bowling. The best in the business were striking in the same ballpark. It is his wickets per match which is arguably shaky. I remember having some lengthy debates with TJB at some time on this topic. That said, he was pretty damn good against the opposition's best batsmen. Was involved in some great duels against Hutton.
Miller ahead of Kallis is not unreasonable. They are mighty close. Kallis having a much more fulfilling career swings it in his favor for me(though no fault of Miller).
If Miller had home umpires and ball tampered like Imran he would average 12 with the ballI just wonder when posters try to compare Miller and Imran as bowlers if they really do rate Miller that highly or are just trying to knock Imran down a peg.
Somehow Imran snuck those home umpires on those foreign tours where he did well tooIf Miller had home umpires and ball tampered like Imran he would average 12 with the ball