You are certainly being a bit kind to Ian Harvey here, he should certainly be demoted to 'Bits & Peices Player'iamdavid said:Common Allrounder -
Someone who would not make the team on neither disipline alone but who's combined proficiency with both gets them in the side.
eg Ian Harvey , Flintoff (in tests) , Craig White , Watson (although he is potentially a guenuine allrounder , time will tell) , Ian Blackwell.
Bits & Peices Player -
A player who is pretty ordinary in both departments but makes it due to his perceived ability in both or the fact that he's black & Zimbabwean or a Bangladeshi.
eg Ronnie Irani , Blessing Mahwire , Khaled Mahmud.
Streak is a very good captain in the circumstances, and also a better batsman and bowler than Oram...Mingster said:Yes I do.
Are you saying Oram's captaincy is not equal if better than Streak or his fielding is better?
No, but there are more than enough batsmen who can play in one form and not in another to make batting ability in one form no proof at all of that in the other.Hard Harry said:Not really - Scoring a first class hundred isn't exactly easy. Just because it wasn't a one day innings doesn't mean he forgets which way to hold a bat when he puts his colours on!
Personally I don't agree with your "genuine" and "common" divisions. I'd just say anyone roughly equal with both trates (and captaincy and wicketkeeping DOES NOT come into it - wicketkeepers are expected to be reasonable batsmen and captains are expected to be worth a place in the side) is an all-rounder. Like you get good specialist batsmen\bowlers and not so good ones, you get the same with all-rounders.iamdavid said:My defenition is-
Guenuine Allrounder -
Someone who would make the team on either disipline , even if suffered an injury which prevented him from bowling again he would make it as a batsman , & likewise if his batting fell away he could still play with the ball.
There have been very few of these men in test history & really I cant see one of them around now , I dont reckon Kallis would make the South African side as a bowler alone , Gilchrist would probably make our side as a specialist batsman though.
Ervine , I reckon would make the Zimabwean team as a batsman or bowler.
Chris Cairns would'be before his injury but not anymore.
Abdur Razzaq is in ODI's.
Flintoff in ODI's but dosent come close in tests.
Batting Allrounder -
A player who would make the team as a specialist batsman , or come very close to it , & who does a job with the ball.
eg Kallis , Jayasuria , Symonds , Lehmann , Gavaskar jnr , Grant Flower , Russel Arnold , Chris Cairns (nowdays) , Hafeez , Afridi , Bangar , Styris , Rikki Clarke.
Bowling Allrounder -
A player who would make the team as a specialist bowler , or come very close it it , who can do a job with the bat.
eg Pollock , Streak , Bichel , Blignaut , Banks , Drakes , Mills , Oram , Vettori (well he's getting close) , Giles (likewise) , Wasim Akram , Shoaib Malik , Lokurachchi (spelling ??).
Common Allrounder -
Someone who would not make the team on neither disipline alone but who's combined proficiency with both gets them in the side.
eg Ian Harvey , Flintoff (in tests) , Craig White , Watson (although he is potentially a guenuine allrounder , time will tell) , Ian Blackwell.
Bits & Peices Player -
A player who is pretty ordinary in both departments but makes it due to his perceived ability in both or the fact that he's black & Zimbabwean or a Bangladeshi.
eg Ronnie Irani , Blessing Mahwire , Khaled Mahmud.
Like I just said, I think Khaled Mahmud is every bit as much an all-rounder as Kallis is.PY said:I can think of one truly world-class all-rounder currently in the truest sense of the word and that is Jacques Kallis (maybe not even him bowling has trailed off a bit recently).
Hmm...PY said:Kallis - Tests - 75, Runs - 5486 @ 53.26, Wickets - 158 @ 30.23
There's an awful lot of bowlers who would like a record like Kallis'.
This again outlines the ludicrousy of the ratings.Neil Pickup said:ODIs (Bat & Bowl)
Oram: 63rd & 9th
Well, I don't rate Harvey but there's no arguing with his record from WC2003 onwards.Mister Wright said:You are certainly being a bit kind to Ian Harvey here, he should certainly be demoted to 'Bits & Peices Player'
Yet there's more that are successes in both forms.Richard said:No, but there are more than enough batsmen who can play in one form and not in another to make batting ability in one form no proof at all of that in the other.
Quite a lot of the time a player who shows ability in one form can't seem to put it together in the other. Take Michael Vaughan in OD for both England and Yorkshire, he plays in a very similer way in both Tests and ODIs but he makes a lot more mistakes in ODIs and gets out a lot earlier. Then you get a Riccardo Powell who can't bat in 4D cricket. Yes there are players who either have decent records in both forms, even great ones, but often they are heavily biased towards one of the forms of the game, sometimes even becoming poor in one of the forms whilst being superb in another. Flintoff is another case, inconsistant with the bat and ball for Lancashire and England in 4D and Test cricket, yet in ODIs and Domestic OD cricket he's an accurate, economical, effective bowler and a much more consistant batsman.marc71178 said:Yet there's more that are successes in both forms.
Banks? IMO Banks is a batting allrounder, regardless of what the WICB wants to portray him as.iamdavid said:My defenition is-
Bowling Allrounder -
A player who would make the team as a specialist bowler , or come very close it it , who can do a job with the bat.
eg Pollock , Streak , Bichel , Blignaut , Banks
Um not 6 actually. He also bowled well in the Pakistan v NZ 'A' Tour.Richard said:This again outlines the ludicrousy of the ratings.
Oram had two recent good series and both were very limited. The one before that, in which he played a much fuller part, returned an economy-rate of over 6-an-over, and a single wicket in the entire tournament.
On a handful of matches (6 at the most), someone rises to 9th in the rankings.
:rolleyes: :rolleyes: :rolleyes:
Richard said:Like I just said, I think Khaled Mahmud is every bit as much an all-rounder as Kallis is.
Just nowhere near as good.
What I mean is that both common & guenuine are generally of equal ability with both bat & ball , however a guenuine allrounder is of high enough quality to make the side with either disipline , even if he was unable to perform the other.Richard said:Personally I don't agree with your "genuine" and "common" divisions. I'd just say anyone roughly equal with both trates (and captaincy and wicketkeeping DOES NOT come into it - wicketkeepers are expected to be reasonable batsmen and captains are expected to be worth a place in the side) is an all-rounder. Like you get good specialist batsmen\bowlers and not so good ones, you get the same with all-rounders.
Bits-and-pieces player is a term I have grown to dislike. If they're all-rounders (and some are specialist batsmen or bowlers, or batting- or bowling-all-rounders) they're just not very good ones, either.
I would agree.Neil Pickup said:9 Oram
11 Gough
12 Harbhajan
13 Anderson
14 Bond
15 Streak
16 Tuffey
17 Gayle
20 Dillon
21 Shoaib
22 Agarkar
23 Collymore
24 Vettori
31 Kumble
32 Razzaq
33 Kallis
34 Styris
39 Saqlain
When you remember it's current in ODIs... 9th is fair. There are few below that have been more impressive.
Yeah, I was thinking the same thing. Lehmann was there, and was attacked also, let's remember. I'm not sure he'd be right to play for a while, yet.marc71178 said:Was the squad named before or after the tragedy of Hookes?
If after, I think it's clear why he wasn't selected.
I agree. His reputation as a death bowler was never there for me, and tonight he prooved it. Even when I saw him at the WACA a few weeks ago, he was pummled in his last few (Ged will know who by). I mean, I guess he's not that bad, but he's not that good either. In other words, once Watson's bowling again, I reckon he's gotta be out for good.Mister Wright said:You are certainly being a bit kind to Ian Harvey here, he should certainly be demoted to 'Bits & Peices Player'