Going purely by averages, Aubrey Faulkner fits your criteria perfectly. But he played a long time ago so I don't really know what to make of him. I've never heard if him being talked about as one of the greatest all rounders quite as often as his stats would suggestA true all-rounder for me would be someone who averages around 25 with the ball and around 40 with the bat. The closest to that is probably Clive Rice, although it's a shame he never played Tests - could have been the greatest all-rounder ever!
your updated post is still full of your previous errorsUpdated/ edited post.
Extremely harsh to suggest Illingworth wasn't good enough on bowling alone IMO.How would you classify Trevor Bailey and Ray Illingworth?
Neither ever feature in discussions about all-rounders, and while both might have managed a handful of Tests as bowlers alone neither were really good enough as batter or bowler alone to play international cricket, yet for long periods both were automatic selections - Illingworth was a decent skipper of course, but I think the main reason was that both tended to be at their best in a crisis
Two wickets a match over a 61 Test career isn't great - without his batting I think all of Fred Titmus, David Allen or Pat Pocock would have played a few more Tests, and when he was skipper there were quite a lot when we wouldn't otherwise have played two spinners and he wasn't in the same league as Derek UnderwoodExtremely harsh to suggest Illingworth wasn't good enough on bowling alone IMO.
Ye, the thought of any of those "bowling all-rounders" bar Imran batting at 7 would fill me with dread.Wasim, Marshall, and Warne don't really belong in the bowling all rounder category. Don't force the definition on them please
What if I averaghed 55 with the bat and 40 with the ball. I'd be too useless a bolwer to be considered an allrounder, but would still have figures comparable to Imran KhanIt's all about how the batting average is compared to the bowling average, no matter how low or high
Would you revise this if Broad ended up with 6 test centuries?Neither Broad or Swann are anywhere near all-rounders nowadays, far too many insignificant innings'
What if 4 of them were across 2 home series to Bangladesh?Probably
God, I don't know, if they came at 6-250 I'd still consider them good knocks and this may influence the decision. If he scored a half century every two tests or so and developed an ability to dig his side out of trouble or further their position with relative consistency then I'd say he might become a bowling all-rounder in my bookWhat if 4 of them were across 2 home series to Bangladesh?
You've got Imran Khan as a bowling allrounder, yet Flintoff as a genuine all-rounder?Bowling All Rounders
Imran Khan
Richard Hadlee
Wasim Akran
Shaun Pollock
Allan Davidson
Ray Lindwall
Malcolm Marshall
Shane Warne
Mike Proctor
All Rounders
Ian Botham
Keith Miller
Aubrey Faulkner
Brian McMillan
Trevor Goddard
Fred Flintoff
Batting All Rounders are players who would be selected based on their batting alone who also are capable fifth bowlers whose bowling average are lower than their batting average and gets at least one wicket per match.
Bowling All Rounders are players who would be selected based on their bowling alone who have an average over twenty and are useful lower order batsmen who could possibly bat as high as No. 7 and capable of scoring fifties when required to rescue or strengthen the team's position.
Genuine All Rounders are players who play on the strength of both disciplines though probably wouldn't be able to secure their place based on either alone. So either they play primarily as bowlers and hurt the strength of the attack but strengthen the batting depth or bat in the top 6 and weaken the batting but strengthen the bowling depth.
Personally I prefer to have a batting and a bowling All rounder to provide a strong fifth bowler and strong batting depth at No. 8. The only way a genuine all rounder fits into a team is if there is a wicket keeping All Rounder whose batting can make up for the batting deficiency.