What constitutes a 'genuine' allrounder?

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Lots of names being thrown around but there are not many that meet my criteria.

To be a genuine allrounder you need you need to have expectations around your batting not just seen as valuable tailend runs. Probably batting top 6 maybe 7 in a strong team. People need to notice when you don't make runs.

From a bowling perspective again there needs to be an expectation that you take wickets. Not just bowling overs to give the main bowlers a break.
 
It's very hard IMO to properly measure an all rounder statistically. You have a bloke like Flintoff - who, at his best with either bat or ball, was an absolute force - who averaged 31 with the bat and 32 with the ball; for context, Pete Siddle averaged 30.67 with the ball, and there wouldn't be all that many people saying that Siddle was a better bowler than Flintoff was. Shane Watson is - by the 'your batting average minus your bowling average, positive number' - a true allrounder at test level; 35.2 with the bat, 33.68 with the ball.

The crux of the problem in my opinion is this: I have all the time in the world for a part timer with the ball - Joe Root, Travis Head, Aaron Finch, Virender Sehwag - or a pinch hitter like James Faulkner, Chris Cairns, Brett Lee, Pat Cummins, Ravi Ashwin, but I do not like having a set all rounder in the team whose stats with their primary skill aren't enough justification for them to be in the team alone. It's all very well for the Kallis', the Jadeja's and the Millers of the world, but if you're not taking wickets at less than 28 - 31 for an offie, as they have to tour Australia and we are where offies go to die - or making runs at upwards of 40, you're simply not as good as a primary option in your primary skill.

As such, true all rounders are exceedingly rare in my eyes. Keith Miller, Jadeja, Kallis, Sobers are the only ones I can think of.
 

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It's very hard IMO to properly measure an all rounder statistically. You have a bloke like Flintoff - who, at his best with either bat or ball, was an absolute force - who averaged 31 with the bat and 32 with the ball; for context, Pete Siddle averaged 30.67 with the ball, and there wouldn't be all that many people saying that Siddle was a better bowler than Flintoff was. Shane Watson is - by the 'your batting average minus your bowling average, positive number' - a true allrounder at test level; 35.2 with the bat, 33.68 with the ball.

The crux of the problem in my opinion is this: I have all the time in the world for a part timer with the ball - Joe Root, Travis Head, Aaron Finch, Virender Sehwag - or a pinch hitter like James Faulkner, Chris Cairns, Brett Lee, Pat Cummins, Ravi Ashwin, but I do not like having a set all rounder in the team whose stats with their primary skill aren't enough justification for them to be in the team alone. It's all very well for the Kallis', the Jadeja's and the Millers of the world, but if you're not taking wickets at less than 28 - 31 for an offie, as they have to tour Australia and we are where offies go to die - or making runs at upwards of 40, you're simply not as good as a primary option in your primary skill.

As such, true all rounders are exceedingly rare in my eyes. Keith Miller, Jadeja, Kallis, Sobers are the only ones I can think of.

Needed a bigger sample size but Faulkner easily as well (Aubrey, not James)


Confident that in any other nation Rakheem The Dream would join this list
 
This might be controversial but I think Shane Watson was close to being a genuine all-rounder…obviously injuries limited his effectiveness/success at an international level but on potential alone, he was pretty close to being the sort of cricketer who could demand a spot as a bat or as a 3rd seamer…probably a batting all-rounder overall but gee, when fit and in conditions that suited, he was a very dangerous bowler

I would have loved to see what he could have been if he’d been consistently fit through his career…I can see why the selectors gave him chance after chance to come good
 
This

I genuinely loved watching the guy bowl. It was such a pity it was almost invariably a ‘well **** we are in shock that Donald and Pollock and Ntini and Steyn and Morkel and Philander didn’t work… better let Jake have a go’ situation with him because in literally any team of his era not called SA or Australia he would have been bowling enough to take closer to 400 wickets you would have to assume, even if it did maybe reduce his batting output. He was such a mentally strong cricketer I don’t think it would have fazed him much anyway.

It was actually almost the reverse with Pollock and the bat.

I’ve mentioned in this forum before that I read somewhere once that someone tried to look through all the batsmen that played during Lara’s era to find someone that looked a little bit like him in style and had some of the same strokeplay and the one they actually came up with was Shaun Pollock with the way he had the real high backlift and the back foot going across towards gully and lightning fast hands through the ball.

But again like Kallis he played in a side that in theory (not always in practice when they came up against Australia during Pollock’s era) was generally stacked with good batsmen so he was never needed to bat any higher or with more responsibility.

Pollock would have had an extra test century to his name but can blame the Indian f**kwits for the carry on after the ball tampering incident during the 2001 tour where they refused Mike Denness’ charges and the third test was stripped of test status.

On the all rounder subject, Kallis himself was robbed of another century from that match as well, and a couple of wickets.
My cousin knocked about in the same Cape Town private school set as Kallis when she was at school and she's always said it's a bloody good thing he was good at cricket.
 
There is one all rounder who was generally high class at all facets. Not just a bowler who could bat ok or vice versa. Alas he never got a shot at Test cricket.

I am talking about Clive Rice. FC figures of 26331 runs at 40.95 and 930 wickets at 22.39 indicate a real talent.
Absolute shame that international cricket lovers did not get to see Clive Rice play test cricket.
 

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What constitutes a 'genuine' allrounder?

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