So we'll just ignore all the Tests where batters could make runs and Ashwin/Jadeja still dominated, just like all the other great bowlers who do well even when the pitches aren't bowling friendly. I understand that you don't like watching anyone you don't rate but this is incredibly stupid.If your performance is reliant on specially prepared pitches, it is a problem.
The thing is that I have repeatedly given my reasoning as to why Kallis, Hammond or Sobers are a better and more viable option for the all rounder spot over Imran and especially Hadlee, the overwhelming and unanimous referenced consensus is purely to provide verification and precedence to the argument. It's not something that's remotely up for discussion. And with regards to my perceived bias, Cricinfo had a bias as well? It was unanimous, Wisden had a bias?
Andy Flower has never been a great wicket keeper, a world class wicket keeper or even a full test standard one. He himself acknowledged that he knew he wasn't particularly special with the gloves and that Zim would be better suited by a better specialist. There have been many test keepers who have been below test standard, Pant is one example now. We've had plenty, Browne and Murray comes to mind.
With regards to slip fielding, I've already said that it's not as important as primary batting nor bowling. That's considerably different to comparing it to supplementary bowling or lower order batting. But the value of a specialist isn't lower and is vital for selection. Multiple players have been selected on the basis of their slip catching and much more have maintained their places because of it. This isn't a new premise nor game breaking, since the advent of fast bowling supremacy, it's been noted where most of the catches were taken and the importance of having socialists in such positions. I'm not sure if you grasp the concept that a dropped catch is a wicket lost. Even in this WTC final catching has played a greater role and had a bigger impact than either no 8 batsman or any of the 5th bowlers.
There's an entire thread where this has been litigated and there are viable arguments for each. I also don't assume that I know everything and reached out to the longest tenured and most respected members of the forum who all basically echoed my sentiments. You cannot win with a sub par cordon, history speaks to this as well. It's been a critical pillar in the success of the greatest modern teams of our era. All of the bowlers who gets the credit relied heavily on their catching support. Even from the 70's, Lillee, the quartet, Marshall, McGrath and Warne, Steyn. Even Hadlee had Coney and Crowe. The catches don't take themselves and it is a valuable and selectable skill. It turns matches, dropped catches actually looses them.
Yes, groups of people who value different things incorrectly (just like you) can be biased. That doesn't change how good Imran and Hadlee were, even compared to Kallis/Sobers/etc.
Again, I'm not accepting **** from someone who's so prone to making things up, and doesn't want to acknowledge the batting superiority anyway of Flower vs Gilly.
You say you don't think slip fielding is as valuable, yet want to bitch and moan so much about how important it is and why picking players who aren't great at that is so bad and insulting to you. Shut up and accept that you have an idiot's view of what works in Test cricket and acknowledge that you need to learn from people like me. Don't respond again until you fix yourself.