I really have no clue about him. Sorry. Including him in the Gregory-Mankad list of players I need to watch some footage of and read about.
It can be said quite naturally in fact. As I remarked before, I would place Imran as a test player overall slightly ahead of Botham due to his remarkable consistency, and the fact that he usually became better with age. But I think what I am saying is that there is a difference between being an all-round player and being an all-rounder. The true all-rounder, for me, are those players who perform with the bowl and bat in the same test on a regular basis. The team should look at them as an additional batsman and an additional bowler at the same time. If you were really good at bowling at one point of your career, and then at batting at another point without doing too much together, then I would call you a great all-round player, not a great all-rounder. Same reason why I rank Miller so high here.
Obviously, many will disagree with this view. Not saying this is the only correct way to look at it. Nor am I saying that Imran wasn't a true all-rounder. Just that he wasn't as good as Botham. Botham's decline was sad, yes, but his peak was the stuff all-rounders dream of. Before anybody else says that Imran averaged 50 with the bat for 10 years, at the same time averaging 20 with the ball, I would again ask them to look at individual tests and series' performances. Like a 5-fer and a century in the same test, or 250 runs and 20 wickets in the same series. Yes, Imran may have had fantastic averages with both bat and ball in the same series, but his batting scores were usually not too big. Good, but not Botham like.