Welcome to the forums mate! Hope you stick around.Some posters are seriously underestimating Imran's worth as a bowler, he was a genuine all-time great up there with Lillee and Marshall in the highest pedigree. Imran was a pioneer of reverse swing, bowled mostly on pancake wickets, and had a better record against the mighty West Indies line up than any other pacer of the era. Miller had only 170wickets in 55 matches and you seriously suggest he was better than Imran in this category? A comparison with Ray Lindwall is more suitable.
Miller was arguably the better batsman, but not by the wide gap some people are suggesting. Imran had a slow start career-wise, but managed to average over 50 is his last 50 tests, no small feat when you consider he batted so low down the order. He could adjust his strokeplay to almost any situation, and played purely as a batsman when he was injured as a bowler.
Finally, he wasn't just a captain, he was a leader. Landmark victories in England and India, never losing to the West Indies, winning the World Cup, etc. All this with the most fractious side in world cricket.
Don't get me wrong, Keith Miller was fantastic, a man capable of captivating audiences with the ball and bat. But come on, he played in the Invincibles alongside Bradman, Barnes, Lindwall, etc., you can't tell me he experienced the same pressures as Imran did to transform his side to a cricketing force.
For his status as a bowling legend, fantastic stats against the best, shouldering the lion's share of his team's responsibility and a proven track track record as captain, Imran simply rates higher. Don't just take my word for it, ask Richie Benaud, who adored Keith Miller but had to concede that Imran was the better all-rounder.
Thanks! Cricketweb is the most insightful forum on cricket I've come across, so hopefully I should be around.Welcome to the forums mate! Hope you stick around.
And how do you come to that conclusion ? Isn't scoring at the rate of 58 tougher(esp if you bat @ no. 6/7) than having a bowling averge of 23 or so ?...Imran's bowling equals Sobers batting.....but Sobers bowling cannot be considered equal to ....Imran's batting
Well, a few things...Your opinion, not mine though. And again, even in that belief, you should also note that Imran was not that good of a batsman whilst he was bowling - he did not perform the two disciplines together to the level that Keith Miller did. I am sure, if at the end of his career, Miller batted lower down the order and concentrated more on his bowling he'd improve his bowling figures to make that 6 ball difference even more negligible or if like Imran he stopped bowling altogether and concentrated on his batting his average would shoot past 40. Logically we can assume this knowing how great he was with the bat and the ball.
WWII, for one.this contest should have stopped long ago
if miller was so good then why didnt he play asmany matches as imran?
I'm not so sure, I think its pretty commonly accepted in cricketing circles that Sobers was an all-time great batsman, and Imran and Hadlee were all-time great bowlers, though they were all all-rounders. That's not the case with Miller. If he was an all-time great bowler, you'd expect that opinion to be heard from some corner since he retired decades ago. The most I've heard is that he was very good, but not up there with Trueman, Lindwall and the others.Miller's bowling would be much more commonly discussed, and he would be more frequently mentioned as an all time great with the ball, if he hadn't also been a brilliant batsman. Its similar to how Sobers' batting is frequently, relatively, underrated because of the regard he's held in as an allrounder. People mentally pigeon hole them.
.Also why didn't Imran play as many matches as Glenn mcgrathAnd if Bradman was so good why didn't he play as many matches as Keith Fletcher.
Sobers played just 13 innings out of 160 at # 7 & Imran's bowling average was 22,not 23.Having average of 22 is much difficult to achieve( especially when you have just mediocore bowlers to support you at the other end) as compared to having a good top/middle order batsmen to support you at the other end.Also,Imran had to play on wickets for most of his career which are known as Graveyard of fast bowlers.And how do you come to that conclusion ? Isn't scoring at the rate of 58 tougher(esp if you bat @ no. 6/7) than having a bowling averge of 23 or so ?
Actually their statistics are remarkably similar.Statistically, Imran's not a blackhead on Miller.
That is quite possibly the worst, most un-informed and poorly reasoned comment anybody has ever made on CW.this contest should have stopped long ago
if miller was so good then why didnt he play asmany matches as imran?
Someone even said that Miller was a better bowler than Imran which is highly laughable.
Have I missed something??Kazo,Miller was clearly the better batsman but IMO the gap in their bowling is much more than in their batting.
No, Lindwall wasn't distinctly better, not by his legend nor by stats. I've rarely heard of Miller and Lindwall not being talked of as equals. Whatever the difference, distinct it wasn't. And I've, personally, having gone through so many records of bowlers of the time I can say that Miller/Lindwall were so ahead of the pack that I can easily consider both with the greatest era of bowlers now.Well, a few things...
First, Lindwall and Miller were neck to neck? This is news to me, especially since almost every major player from that time I have read rated about Lindwall as far and away the best fast bowler of the time. Lindwall was distinctly ahead of Miller, there's a reason you never hear Miller's name come up when you discuss the greatest bowlers. Imran and Lindwall are consistently compared with Lillee, Marshall and McGrath, who I'm sure you agree are a league ahead of Miller. Some differences can't be told fully by stats (though Imran is still better off there). You can use averages to prove that Kallis is a better bowler than Sobers, but nobody would believe you.
No, he did, just not consistently. Imran and Botham are the only 2 all-rounders to score a century and take 10 wickets in a match, but you're not going to tell me that Imran performed at both very well at the same time like Botham did - and in this case Miller.Second, you make it seem as if Imran never scored runs while his bowling was still potent. In that period you talk about where he averaged over 50 with the bat, he also averaged 20 with the ball! Imran was such that if his bowling occasionally wouldn't click, he would deliver the goods with the bat instead, to the extent that throughout the 80s, he never collectively failed in a test series (you can check the stats on that). That, my friend, is phenomenal and underscores what made Imran special, he would always rise to the occasion and deliver somehow. Sure, he may not have batted as successfully with the same consistency as Miller during his early bowling days, but this point alone doesn't mean Miller ranks ahead of him.
Sobers would be considered an all-time great even if he had not bowled a ball, what is that supposed to prove? If you consider successful being dependable and at times scoring important runs, sure he was. But he wasn't a consistent run scorer. Let me put it to you this way, the not-outs inflate his batting feats. For a team that is wanting to win, 40 runs in the middle of the match is more important than knocking off 20* by finishing the team off at the end. The not-out is only something used as assessment of the batsman in question throughout his career, but when you only score, let's say 27 runs on average - whilst you're bowling well - it gives a better indication at what you actually did for your team. An extreme example is someone batting at the tail and getting 20 runs each innings in the end staying not-out for almost all his games. Whilst that is a feat in itself, that person could border on a Bradman average but in reality he's only contributing 20 runs per innings for his team.Let me put it this way. Imran would be considered an all-time great even if he had never scored a run. The fact that he did so successfully, much before his bowling began to fade, and was the country's greatest ever captain (a fact one has to definitely give him credit for), elevates him ahead of Miller, who was very fine but not great in both categories, was a bit better at performing with both simultaneously, and never captained.
Me too Archie? I'd say the difference is very little between them but to say it's laughable or to say that they can't even be compared as bowlers is really stretching it.Have I missed something??
Miller was a great bowler every bit as good as Imran, his average is 22 which is pretty good. What did Khan do that was so much better with the ball?
You must understand that stats are all that matter to many on this siteMe too Archie? I'd say the difference is very little between them but to say it's laughable or to say that they can't even be compared as bowlers is really stretching it.
Also - considering Sobers is being dicussed too - through this bit of research I've come to understand Sobers' legacy better and whilst before this I'd hold Imran as the better all-rounder I consider Sobers higher again for 2 reasons:
1) his figures look terrible when you compare across eras and only when you look more to the bowlers around him you understand they were pretty decent.
2) in performing with bat and ball at the same time he does it more consistently than Imran
For me,Miller's 3.1 wickets per match,,just one 10WM & much much less 5 wicket hauls as well.All these things count as much against him as abowler as Imran's not outs against him.Imran is in the same tier as Marshal,Barnes,Hadlee etc when it comes to bowlers while Miller is nowhere near that.Have I missed something??
Miller was a great bowler every bit as good as Imran, his average is 22 which is pretty good. What did Khan do that was so much better with the ball?
Since they have been playing Test cricket for over 130 years, I would think I could name 30 fast bowlers with very little between them, Miller and Imran being two of those bowlers. Both were very different, but one of the all time greats (Hutton)said 'you could hit Miller for a single or even three, but never for a boundary, because the next would be an unplayable ball'For me,Miller's 3.1 wickets per match,,just one 10WM & much much less wicket hauls as well.All these things count as much against him as abowler as Imran's not outs against him.Imran is in the same tier as Marshal,Barnes,Hadlee etc when it comes to bowlers while Miller is nowhere near that.
Is Imran one of the top 10 bowlers ever? Yes
Is Miller one of the top 10 bowlers ever? Not even top 20(would be somewhere around 25 to 30 for me).
Tell me number of those players or writers/journalists who consider Imran as one of the best & also those consider Miller in the top 10 or atleast as good as Imran.