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The Greatest All-Rounder of All Time

aussie

Hall of Fame Member
Flattery will get you everywhere Ikki!

There’s no question that in his early career Miller was seen predominantly as a batsman, and an outstanding one at that, nor is there any question that the demands of bowling – and of not taking anything particularly seriously – took the edge off his batting as his career progressed. Phillip Derriman put it best when he noted that “Miller came into big cricket as a brilliant batsman who surprised people by bowling as well as he did, and went out of it as a great fast bowler who could still bat brilliantly but only on occasion.“

For most people, Miller shone brightest as a batsman in 1945 in the Victory Tests and for the Dominions XI against England – in those six “Tests” he made 654 runs at 72 with four centuries and his batting was by all accounts of absolutely the highest class. Bill O’Reilly was one of many convinced he would go on to become one of Australia’s greatest ever batsmen but as Tiger himself later said: “He never blossomed out as I was certain he would.”

There are a number of reasons for this, and Bradman can take some credit/blame – he recognised in Miller early on a great natural bowler and the Australian side of the time needed Miller’s bowling more than his batting, so as Nugget’s career progressed bowling assumed the greater significance, even if his back problems meant that he couldn’t bowl the sheer quantity of overs that his captains might have liked. It should be remembered as well that due to the war Miller didn’t play his first Test until the age of 26, and was 27 by the time he played his second. It’s only natural then that he declined after a few years, given by that time he was well into his 30s.

It was noted too by John Warr among others that Miller’s technique, particularly on wet wickets or those taking spin, could be found wanting – too much pad and not enough bat, and without the patience required in those conditions to build a big score. As Ikki, Matt and several other posters have also correctly pointed out, Miller relished a contest and found it hard to motivate himself to cash in against minnows – it’s no coincidence that all of Miller’s Test centuries came against either England or WI, the two other major powers in world cricket at the time.

To say that he never performed with both bat and ball at the same time isn’t correct though. He’s one of only two men along with Sobers to score 300 runs and take 20 wickets in the same series more than once, and topped 200 runs/15 wickets in four further series. For a player renowned for flights of erratic behaviour and a devil-may-care attitude, his overall Test career is actually one of admirable consistency. Whether he would have achieved more or less with a different attitude is a moot point, what he did achieve still puts him among a tiny elite.
I blame Hitler for not allowing us to see the best of Miller the "all-rounder"
 

bagapath

International Captain
Even Imran avoided playing minnows!
that is totally untrue. he played 10 tests against sri lanka, the minnow of his era, and took 46 wickets at an average under 15. if you take these wickets away, his overall bowling average falls to 24 (from a figure under 23). it is obvious that he did benefit from playing a lot against them. i consider imran the best all-rounder ever (sobers in my books was a batting all-rounder) but i wont buy the argument you have presented.
 

The Sean

Cricketer Of The Year
that is totally untrue. he played 10 tests against sri lanka, the minnow of his era, and took 46 wickets at an average under 15. if you take these wickets away, his overall bowling average falls to 24 (from a figure under 23). it is obvious that he did benefit from playing a lot against them. i consider imran the best all-rounder ever (sobers in my books was a batting all-rounder) but i wont buy the argument you have presented.
This was what I was getting at when I asked what kingkallis meant by his statement - it didn't make much sense, and your figures there bear this out.
 

subshakerz

International Coach
that is totally untrue. he played 10 tests against sri lanka, the minnow of his era, and took 46 wickets at an average under 15. if you take these wickets away, his overall bowling average falls to 24 (from a figure under 23). it is obvious that he did benefit from playing a lot against them. i consider imran the best all-rounder ever (sobers in my books was a batting all-rounder) but i wont buy the argument you have presented.
I believe what the poster may have been referring to was one series against New Zealand in 1990 which Imran opted out of when he discovered that Hadlee wasn't playing. But that was the exception, not the rule.
 

bagapath

International Captain
okay guys... here is how i intend to run the polls... suggestions are welcome...

to qualify for the polls, the player

1. should have taken 4 or more wickets in an innings at least 5 times. post WW2 cricketers should have taken at least 100 wickets.
2. scored 50 or more on at least five occasions. and average > 20 with the bat overall
3. am including stats against all nations and including the ICC XI vs Australia match.

I intend to conduct two prelim polls and choose SIX players out of them for the final polls.

Poll 1 will feature pure all rounders. batting avg > 30. bowling avg < 35. and bowling avg is not more than two points above batting avg. we are selecting FOUR players from this pool.

Code:
GA Faulkner (SA) 	25 	1754 	204 	40.79 	4 	82 	7/84 	26.58 	4 	20 	0 
WA Armstrong (Aus)	50 	2863 	159* 	38.68 	6 	87 	6/35 	33.59 	3 	44 	0 
Imran Khan (Pak) 	88 	3807 	136 	37.69 	6 	362 	8/58 	22.81 	23 	28 	0 
KR Miller (Aus) 	55 	2958 	147 	36.97 	7 	170 	7/60 	22.97 	7 	38 	0 
JM Gregory (Aus) 	24 	1146 	119 	36.96 	2 	85 	7/69 	31.15 	4 	37 	0 
FE Woolley (Eng) 	64 	3283 	154 	36.07 	5 	83 	7/76 	33.91 	4 	64 	0 
TL Goddard (SA) 	41 	2516 	112 	34.46 	1 	123 	6/53 	26.22 	5 	48 	0 
IT Botham (Eng) 	102 	5200 	208 	33.54 	14 	383 	8/34 	28.40 	27 	120 	0 
CL Cairns (NZ) 	62 	3320 	158 	33.53 	5 	218 	7/27 	29.40 	13 	14 	0 
MG Johnson (Aus) 	25 	788 	123* 	32.83 	1 	110 	8/61 	28.68 	3 	6 	0 
SM Pollock (SA) 	108 	3781 	111 	32.31 	2 	421 	7/87 	23.11 	16 	72 	0 
A Flintoff (Eng/ICC) 	78 	3816 	167 	32.06 	5 	225 	5/58 	32.59 	3 	51 	0 
IK Pathan (India) 	29 	1105 	102 	31.57 	1 	100 	7/59 	32.26 	7 	8 	0 
MH Mankad (India) 	44 	2109 	231 	31.47 	5 	162 	8/52 	32.32 	8 	33 	0 
N Kapil Dev (India) 	131 	5248 	163 	31.05 	8 	434 	9/83 	29.64 	23 	64 	0 
MA Noble (Aus) 	42 	1997 	133 	30.25 	1 	121 	7/17 	25.00 	9 	26 	0 
W Rhodes (Eng) 	58 	2325 	179 	30.19 	2 	127 	8/68 	26.96 	6 	60 	0

Poll 2
will feature batting all rounders, bowling all rounders and bits and pieces all rounders. we will select TWO players in this poll.

1. batting all rounder: batting avg > 40 and bowling avg > 30
2. bowling all-rounder: batting avg > 20 and < 30; bowling average < 30.
3. bits and pieces all-rounder: batting avg > 20. bowling average not more than 10 points above batting avg

Code:
GS Sobers (WI) 	93 	8032 	365* 	57.78 	26 	235 	6/73 	34.03 	6 	109 	0 
JH Kallis (ICC/SA) 	131 	10277 	189* 	54.66 	31 	258 	6/54 	31.08 	5 	147 	0 
AW Greig (Eng) 	58 	3599 	148 	40.43 	8 	141 	8/86 	32.20 	6 	87 	0 
TE Bailey (Eng) 	61 	2290 	134* 	29.74 	1 	132 	7/34 	29.21 	5 	32 	0 
W Bates (Eng) 	15 	656 	64 	27.33 	0 	50 	7/28 	16.42 	4 	9 	0 
Sir RJ Hadlee (NZ) 	86 	3124 	151* 	27.16 	2 	431 	9/52 	22.29 	36 	39 	0 
MW Tate (Eng) 	39 	1198 	100* 	25.48 	1 	155 	6/42 	26.16 	7 	11 	0 
AK Davidson (Aus) 	44 	1328 	80 	24.59 	0 	186 	7/93 	20.53 	14 	42 	0 
R Benaud (Aus) 	63 	2201 	122 	24.45 	3 	248 	7/72 	27.03 	16 	65 	0 
WPUJC Vaas (SL) 	111 	3089 	100* 	24.32 	1 	355 	7/71 	29.58 	12 	31 	0 
G Giffen (Aus) 	31 	1238 	161 	23.35 	1 	103 	7/117 	27.09 	7 	24 	0 
Akram (Pak)  	104  	2898  	257*  	22.64  	3  	414  	7/119  	23.62  	25  	44  	0
HH Streak (Zim) 	65 	1990 	127* 	22.35 	1 	216 	6/73 	28.14 	7 	17 	0 
RR Lindwall (Aus) 	61 	1502 	118 	21.15 	2 	228 	7/38 	23.03 	12 	26 	0 
RJ Shastri (India) 	80 	3830 	206 	35.79 	11 	151 	5/75 	40.96 	2 	36 	0 
Abdul Razzaq (Pak) 46 	1946 	134 	28.61 	3 	100 	5/35 	36.94 	1 	15 	0 
DL Vettori (ICC/NZ) 	92 	3220 	137* 	28.24 	3 	293 	7/87 	33.55 	18 	47 	0 
DA Allen (Eng) 	39 	918 	88 	25.50 	0 	122 	5/30 	30.97 	4 	10 	0 
L Amarnath (India) 	24 	878 	118 	24.38 	1 	45 	5/96 	32.91 	2 	13 	0 
R Illingworth (Eng) 	61 	1836 	113 	23.24 	2 	122 	6/29 	31.20 	3 	45 	0 
JH Sinclair (SA) 	25 	1069 	106 	23.23 	3 	63 	6/26 	31.68 	1 	9 	0
 
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bagapath

International Captain
will create separate threads for the polls.

the list is produced here so that we know what we are getting into. rather than worry about missing names etc after the polls are on.
 

SJS

Hall of Fame Member
In his book on Ian Chappell, Ashley Mallet writes of a very interesting episode narrated to him by Keith Miller's son Dennis.

'A few years ago Keith and Denis were watching the Test cricket, and a voice over refered to Don Bradman as the world's best (ever) cricketer. Denis said, Keith rose to his feet and said."Bradman, best batsman? Yes. Best cricketer? Garry Sobers!" '​
 
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Lillian Thomson

Hall of Fame Member
I'm not sure I get your point mate. Imran played plenty against Sri Lanka IIRC.
There's no comparison between the Sri Lankan sides of the 80's and the non-descript collection of party poopers representing Bangladesh. Sri Lanka had a nucleus of Test quality cricketers (especially batsman) and were at least 10 years ahead of Bangladesh in development when they were given Test status.
 

SJS

Hall of Fame Member
There's no comparison between the Sri Lankan sides of the 80's and the non-descript collection of party poopers representing Bangladesh. Sri Lanka had a nucleus of Test quality cricketers (especially batsman) and were at least 10 years ahead of Bangladesh in development when they were given Test status.
... probably more
 

Lillian Thomson

Hall of Fame Member
... probably more

I said "at least 10 years" because I only became aware of them as a cricket nation after the name change in the early 70's and they were stronger then than Bangladesh are now but didn't get Test status for another 10 years.
 

Ikki

Hall of Fame Member
The question of Bangladesh is actually whether they are Test class at all. But Sri Lanka were certainly minnows.
 

Lillian Thomson

Hall of Fame Member
The question of Bangladesh is actually whether they are Test class at all. But Sri Lanka were certainly minnows.
But you can't compare the difference it makes to a bowlers average today to Imran's era. If it's true that he averaged 15 against Sri Lanka he would probably average about 9 against the current Bangladesh imposters.
 

Ikki

Hall of Fame Member
But you can't compare the difference it makes to a bowlers average today to Imran's era. If it's true that he averaged 15 against Sri Lanka he would probably average about 9 against the current Bangladesh imposters.
Murali averages about 13 against them so it's not that far fetched. Usually, though, people tend to disregard Tests against these countries altogether so I am not sure how the difference or distinction matters. The truth is, Imran did play Sri Lanka and they were minnows - which counters the assertion that he never played minnows.
 

Lillian Thomson

Hall of Fame Member
Murali averages about 13 against them so it's not that far fetched. Usually, though, people tend to disregard Tests against these countries altogether so I am not sure how the difference or distinction matters. The truth is, Imran did play Sri Lanka and they were minnows - which counters the assertion that he never played minnows.
When judging a cricketer the strength of the opposition should matter more than just blindly removing the stats of the weakest team of the era irrespective of how competitive they were. It's true it probably doesn't matter to people who reduce cricket to crude number crunching.
 

Ikki

Hall of Fame Member
When judging a cricketer the strength of the opposition should matter more than just blindly removing the stats of the weakest team of the era irrespective of how competitive they were. It's true it probably doesn't matter to people who reduce cricket to crude number crunching.
When people compare greats they rarely, if ever, care about how one great was 2-3 runs/wickets/balls better than another great against a minnow. So, that's why such a stat is of very little value. It shouldn't really matter if you are a stats man or not.
 

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