ElRaja
ODI Debutant
- Joined
- Oct 7, 2010
- Runs
- 10,620
right near the top, second best batting all rounder after sobers, maybe even equal with him.
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Sobers clearing Kallis does not mean that Kallis is clearing IK.What exactly are we talking about here? Is it purely based on stats? If so, then absolutely, there can be no further dispute. But if it's not stats, rather match credentials then you need to explain how was he better than Imran & Botham? What exactly makes him a better all rounder than those two gentlemen? Then there's Miller who belongs to a bygone era, but I have a feeling certain oldtimers who were lucky enough to witness him will claim his greatness.
Nah Imran's got it.Only Sobers clears him as an all rounder. I am talking about the test format here.
Yes, a good case of IK can be made. Anyway, Kallis is near the top among all rounders.Nah Imran's got it.
True. It's Sobers and then a three way between Imran, Miller and Kallis. Hadlee if you wanna.Yes, a good case of IK can be made. Anyway, Kallis is near the top among all rounders.
Botham's peak was phenomenal but his low points were pretty low too. He couldn't manage his injuries. First the pace dropped and then his bowling became pretty pedestrian. He was essentially playing as a batsman after a certain point and even his batting fell away considerably during his last few years.Sobers clearing Kallis does not mean that Kallis is clearing IK.
Botham is his first half was better than any all rounders. I am talking about bringing batting and bowling both, but he fell away in his second half. I will put Sobers first then Kallis/IK and then Miller/Botham taking account of their entire career.
Kallis was regulalrly contributing with secondary skills to get to near 300 test wickets. It's massive and can be seen as equivalent of a bowling all rounder getting near 8K-9K runs.
Sobers retired in 1975. Read this piece written in 1967.No one apart from Bradman can touch Sobers as a cricketer. Sobers is arguably the best batsman ever after Bradman, while Kallis is behind Tendulkar, Lara and Ponting as a batsman from his own time.
Botham from 1977-85 was the closest to a perfect allrounder. Matchwinner both with bat & ball. Nobody except Gary SObers came close to thatBotham's peak was phenomenal but his low points were pretty low too. He couldn't manage his injuries. First the pace dropped and then his bowling became pretty pedestrian. He was essentially playing as a batsman after a certain point and even his batting fell away considerably during his last few years.
For that reason, I wouldn't even put him ahead of Hadlee (who is very underrated) and Kapil Dev, let alone Imran.
Could even say greatest player of all time tbhToday the cricket world celebrates the 50th birthday of Jacques Kallis, one of the greatest cricketers to have strode on our planet, who has a strong case for being rated the 2nd best allrounder to Sir Garfield Sobers if not the best allrounder ever and the best cricketer of his generation.
Kallis was not the run of the mill entertainer or as explosive like Ian Botham or Kapil Dev, not as charismatic as Sachin Tendulkar or Imran Khan or as artistic as Gary Sobers or Wasim Akram. However possibly he surpassed them all for all round cricketing tenacity or endurance, with his prolonged tenures at the crease, making a habit of saving games.
Kallis ended up with skyrocketing figures, scaling horizons unscaled statistically and setting new parameters by an all-rounder, piling on 13,289 runs at an average of 55.37., scoring 45 centuries, in 137 tests,capturing 292 wickets and taking 200 catches. In ODI’s he scored 7995 runs at an average of 43.93 with 13 centuries at and captured 203 wickets at an average of 32.33.
He twice had purple patches where he made five hundreds in the space of eight innings or fewer, statistically surpassing the likes of Viv Richards, Brian Lara, Gary Sobers or Sachin Tendulkar, in this respect, as a run machine.
There is heated debate in the cricketing world on whether Kallis ranks above or on par with Sir Garfield Sobers , 2nd best allrounder of all time ahead of the likes of Imran Khan, Keith Milller, Ian Botham and Kapil Dev and 2nd best ever cricketer to Don Bradman.
Without the slightest hesitation I would not rank Kallis on par with Sir Garfield Sobers. No doubt Kallis’s staggering statistical figures were overwhelming and superseded Sobers, but comparative figures do not convey the unequalled aesthetic qualities of Sobers or overpowering influence as match-winner. Kallis did not posess the diversity of the bowling armoury of Sobers which had genuine pace, fast, medium spin and chinaman, nor as wide array of batting strokes or as contemptuous power. Kallis has never come up with innings equalling Sobers’s majestic 254 at Melbourne in 1972 and 132 in the tied test in 1961, nor turned in all round performances in a single series in the stature of Sobers in England in 1966 or playing for Rest of the World in 1970 in England. However, Kallis was the more durable and more effective in saving match and in peak stints surpassed Sobers in batting consistency., like in 2003-04. No allrounder in cricket history displayed equal consistency with the bat as Kallis or transcended as superlative heights in run scoring in peak periods.
As great fast bowlers win matches more than great batsmen the likes of Imran Khan, Keith Miller, Ian Botham and Kapil Dev could win more matches than Kallis. Kapil Dev, Miller and Botham were also more dynamic with the bat. Still had Kallis played in their era, he may well have overshadowed them all, having to carry less workload as a bowler. -with half as much cricket played then than in his era.
Pertinent that Kallis was not at his best with both bat and ball like Sobers, Botham or Miller, but one has to take into account the transition in the game, which acted against a cricketer’s all-round prowess.
Even if the verdict may well result in dead heat between Keith Miller, Ian Botham, Jacques Kallis and Imran Khan with a gun on my head I place Kallis as the runner up to Sobers, in the plethora of great all-rounders of all time. To replace Gary Sobers in an all-time test team, my first choice would be Kallis.
In comparison to the greatest cricketers like Bradman, Sobers, Viv Richards, Tendulkar and Brian Lara, Kallis lacked the crucial ‘x’ factor. Still, I would choose him amongst my top 15 cricketers of all time.
Yep... Imran was next level... Great as batter. Great as bowler...Behind Sobers and Imran.
Imran Khan is a real GOAT.
Won player of series in Windies
Won player of series in India
Won player of series in England
Won player of series in Australia
Won player of series in Pakistan
Won World Cup Final with bat at no.3
He had a great series in New Zealand too.
Legendary captain as well.
Yep... Imran was next level... Great as batter. Greact as bowler...
As an allrounder we are talking here... Stop getting triggered over any Pakistani name.. MOVE ON brotherHappy 50th Birthday!
Did I read it right? He was at best a pretty decent lower order batsman, much like Ravindra Jadeja. Ask anyone who followed his entire career and who is not a blind fan. Please don't use the word great so lightly.
You said great as a batter. Him being a great batter would be as ridiculous as Sobers being a great bowler.As an allrounder we are talking here... Stop getting triggered over any Pakistani name.. MOVE ON brother
Good as batter.. ATG as bowler..Great captain.Yep... Imran was next level... Great as batter. Great as bowler...
Behind Sobers and Imran.
Imran Khan is a real GOAT.
Won player of series in Windies
Won player of series in India
Won player of series in England
Won player of series in Australia
Won player of series in Pakistan
Won World Cup Final with bat at no.3
He had a great series in New Zealand too.
Legendary captain as well.