I've pointed this out before, you are looking at this comparing the secondary skills of batting and bowling all rounders. Even if you believe the secondary skill of 5th bowling option provided by a batting AR > lower order batting provided by a bowling AR, the fact still remains that the majority of us acknowledge that the primary skill of top tier pace bowling is more valuable than the primary skill of top tier batting.
ATG fast bowlers are consistently the greatest match winners throughout the course of test history and even you admit this. This by itself is a good argument for considering bowling ARs more valuable than batting ARs, without even coming to their secondary attributes.
Missed this the first time around and quite frankly the best argument.
The primary argument wasn't including the primary skills, but why are the secondary skills of the B/A given such priority over the rest.
Yes bowling is more valuable than batting, not immensely so, but noticably so as they impact the results of more matches. My argument has been how much value has than secondary skills added to winning teams of the past. Marshall and McGrath manged to more through without one, through Warne and Marshall comes kinda close to that designation.
In test cricket you
need a decent 5th bowler even if his role is not to get carted around, he doesn't nearly have to be an all rounder, just serviceable, wickets are a bonus. When you have a great bowling attack, or even just a decent one, you
need a great cordon to make the most of the chances, I've seen to too many matches lost by spilled chances and equally seen ones won by taking the half chances. You need a tail that isn't tissue paper, but you don't need a bowling AR, the 3 best teams of my time watching the sport didn't have one and they managed without. None of them would have manged to reach the heights they did without the catching support they received.
As myself and
@Fuller Pilch pitch said in another thread and I believe
@Line and Length somewhat agreed to, may have to verify which post to be sure, Hadlee was the better cricketer of the two all-rounders and I think the one more comparable to Sobers. He was the better bowler (primary job), and damn good enough bat. Where Imran will always make the argument is the reverse card (pun intended?), and hence offering something different.
These have been too long, so trying to keep it short, so to bring it home.... I agree that at the end of the day bowling is more impactful, and that's the way they are graded, by the bowling first, and if it's sufficiently behind, then the batting isn't enough to leap frog for me, and that's probably just me. If we're directly referring to Sobers and Kallis, they also have the catching support to add to their repertoire, and they were both superlative in that role as well, closing the gap IMHO, if there is one.