Post reported - trolling - serial offenderLuke Wright.
You are right that cricketers like Mankad, Mushtaq Mohammad haven't been written about as such. I do not much about Mankad either. So I guess I can't make a reasonable judgement about him. You don't have to thank me for Kapil, my good fellow. Let us both thank Kapil insteadRice and Goddard can easily be replaced with Mankad..
Rice might have been a great allrounder but he played 0 test matches and FC matches are not a good judge of a players true ability even if a player is as great as Rice..Goddard is another player in the list who Mankad can match talent wise equally or better..Mankad is a opener as well and has performed credibly plus as a bowler Vinoo is right up there when compared with Goddard
I even question the presence of Flintoff..What has he done ? won few matches with his bowling ? which Mankad has done as well even outside India and Flintoff played some great innings which again Mankad has done..
You know the problem with some of the old Asian players ..no one has eloquently written about them to remember them..that is the problem..
Edit : Thank you for having Kapil Dev though..in one of the other thread where allrounder X1 was discussed his name wasn't even there..I know that was more of top to bottom exercise but Kapil can bat from 2-7 and at his peak take the bowlers on like no other..
Don't you think you are reading into the circumstances of Imran's performances a little too much? And why are you so hung up on the stats, my good man? You are acting like you haven't seen Kallis bowl for yourself. He is a good bowler. He has taken 280 test wickets. Plus he regularly gets out top order batsmen. SA have used him both as a partnership-breaking bowler and in a containing role.You have to see those performances in the context of those series'
Except for the India series both the other 2 did not have very high scores IIRC. In the India series Imran scored when he got the chance and likewise in other series'. One other series I forgot to mention was England 1987, where he did well with both bat and ball.
Secondly, I find it curious that you have downgraded Hadlee even further and Kallis even further up
Bowling records | Test matches | Cricinfo Statsguru | ESPN Cricinfo
the only noteworthy bowling record that Kallis has is against the bangers and Zimbabwe.
Against none of the other teams does he even average below 30. I really don't see how he then becomes such an awesome bowler?
I have been watching cricket since the 1980s and I have also seen Kallis bowl a fair bit. Which is why I am perplexed as to why you keep bringing up that he as 280 wickets? He is pretty much a partnership breaker as you say and unless you want to keep a partnership breaker as one of your top top 5 all rounders of all time your list can be improved a fair bit.And why are you so hung up on the stats, my good man? You are acting like you haven't seen Kallis bowl for yourself. He is a good bowler. He has taken 280 test wickets. Plus he regularly gets out top order batsmen. SA have used him both as a partnership-breaking bowler and in a containing role.
Kallis is not just a batsman who can bowl a bit........ First of all, he is an all-time-great batsman, a great cricketer, even when leaving out the wickets and the catches.How is Kallis much different? He is just a batsman who can bowl a bit
Keith MillerBowlers who can bat a bit...., batsmen who can bowl bit...... If we would define an all-rounder as a cricketer who would have a substantial test cricket career on either one of the departments...., how many all-rounders would there be?
Hardly a dozen......., perhaps none......
That's true. I believe Flintoff could have been the greatest of them all. He was a devastating quick, very difficult to face, and super quick. Also a very capable, hard hitting number 6 batsman.People will debate that RE Freddie. In his peak years though, no doubt.
Of course, what you have to consider with every 'all-rounder' is how much better they could have been either either discipline if they had worked on it as a specialist.
I'm obviously biased, but I seriously reckon Jacques Kallis had the potential to be at least equal with the ball to what Flintoff could have been with the bat. Kallis' bowling in its prime (ie when he wasn't used as a part-timer as he is today) would be opening the bowling for at least half of the current Test nations. He even opened the bowling for SA at one point iirc. I certainly disagree that Flintoff's batting > Kallis' bowling, or that Flintoff's batting potential > Kallis' bowling potential.Keith Miller
Garry Sobers
Imran Khan
Ian Botham
Kapil Dev
Jack Gregory
Andrew Flintoff
Would have all played for their teams as either a batsman or a bowler, no problems. And all of them would have succeeded far more at either batting or bowling without the pressure of the other discipline, particularly in batting. Have no doubt Miller, Botham, Kapil and Imran were all batsmen capable of averaging 45-50 if they didn't also have the burden of pace bowling.
Kallis would go close to being selected as a bowler, but considering the strength of SA's pace attacks over the last 15 years it's hard to imagine him being selected on the basis of his med-fast bowling alone.
Yeh, fair call. I do think that if Kallis had no batting ability, he wouldn't have been selected as a bowler over a trio such as Donald, Pollock and Ntini. I do take your point though, a Kallis in his prime would probably open the bowling for some test teams.I'm obviously biased, but I seriously reckon Jacques Kallis had the potential to be at least equal with the ball to what Flintoff could have been with the bat. Kallis' bowling in its prime (ie when he wasn't used as a part-timer as he is today) would be opening the bowling for at least half of the current Test nations. He even opened the bowling for SA at one point iirc. I certainly disagree that Flintoff's batting > Kallis' bowling, or that Flintoff's batting potential > Kallis' bowling potential.
I do see that you compared them against their own teams at the time, but I feel that is unfair as you are looking at them from a global scale. I think it's safe to say that SA's bowling has been > England's batting for the majority of Kallis' career, so it's extremely unfair to use this comparison method.
Fair list mate, though I'd certainly have Monty Noble in that list and above quite a few of those guys - possibly even top 10. Cairns, Mankad, Gregory and Bailey could all consider themselves unlucky, and Richie Benaud's peak as an all rounder was also exceptional.Here's my ranking list for all it's worth:
1. Garfield Sobers
2. Keith Miller
3. Ian Botham
4. Jacques Kallis
5. Imran Khan
6. Kapil Dev
7. Mike Procter
8. Clive Rice
9. Richard Hadlee
10. Aubrey Faulkner
11. Tony Greig
12. Trevor Goddard
13. Andrew Flintoff
14. Shane Watson
15. Shaun Pollock
= Wilfred Rhodes
I really don't know much about Gregory and Mankad. I will definitely watch their old footage, and read up more on them as more than 2 people have now brought up their names. Benaud, I am a bit iffy about. Might as well nominate Alan Davidson. Cairns never really impressed me. I completely forgot about Bailey. You are right, he deserves a place here. Also remembered that Charlie Macartney also misses out. Great batsman, but a not too much with the ball, although his one series against England is always talked about by the elders at my club. Will be amending it now.Fair list mate, though I'd certainly have Monty Noble in that list and above quite a few of those guys - possibly even top 10. Cairns, Mankad, Gregory and Bailey could all consider themselves unlucky, and Richie Benaud's peak as an all rounder was also exceptional.