Nedved's Fan said:
That is a silly way of looking at things. Gary Sobers would not have made the West Indies side for his bowling, but no one is questioning his right to be deemed the best allrounder of his time. It should be the same with Kallis who is clearly the best allrounder in the world by far.
just to add about the mini-debate on whether Sobers was a good enough bowler...here is something I found in a book by John Arlott..this was written in 1974.:
"Garfield Sobers was 17 when he first played for West Indies-primarily as an orthodox left arm bowler (4 for 81), though he scored 40 runs for once outin a losing side. His batting developed more rapidly than his bowling and, in the 1957/58 series with Pakistan in West Indies, he played 6 consecutive innings of over fifty, the last three of them centuries. Through the sixties he developed left arem wrist spin, turning the ball sharply and concealing his googly well. Outstandingly, however, at the need of his perceptive captain, Frank Worrell, he made himself into a test class fast medium bowler. Out of his inate athleticism, he evolved an ideally economic action, coupling life from the pitch with late movement through the air and,frequently ,off the seam. Nothing at all in his cricket was more impressive than his ability to switch from any one of his bowling styles to another with instant control.
He was always capable of bowling orthodox left arm spin accurately, witha surprising faster ball and as much turn as the pitch would allow a finger spinner. He had, though,an innate urge to attack, which was his fundamental reason for taking up the less economical, but often more penetrative,'chinaman';and the pace bowling enabled him to make such hostile use of the new ball" from John Arlotts book 'Book Of Cricketers'