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North and Katich were both dropped two tests into the Ashes in 2010/11.
Botham averaged 33 with the bat. Probably not quite good enough overall to cut it as a specialist batsman. There was only one calendar year when Botham averaged 40-plus with the bat.
At one point, very briefly, Flintoff was the kind of player you're describing. In 2005, he was good enough to bat No.6 for England and was one of the best few fast bowlers in the world. That didn't last, though.
I think the upshot is that an all-rounder doesn't need to be good enough with bat and ball. That may be the case for some places for certain periods of their career but it's pretty hard to sustain. Botham, for example, had that great Ashes series in 1982, where he took 34 wickets at 20 and scored 399 runs at 37. In a series they won 3-1, he was man of the match in all three of their wins, scoring two awesome second-innings centuries in Leeds and Manchester, and taking 5-11 in Australia's second innings in Birmingham, preventing them chasing down a modest target. But over the course of his career, I don't think you could say his batting was up to the level expected of a specialist batsman. Admittedly, England had some pretty awful specialist batsmen around that time.
Katich wasn't dropped- he suffered a pretty major injury to his leg from memory.
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Maybe. It just highlights the ridiculousness of Watson batting at No.3, when he's basically hanging on because of his bowling.I think the alternative of 5 specialist bats and an allrounder the bats at 6 or 7 and averages in the 30's is acceptable in some circumstances. Depends on balance of team.
Interestingly, Botham didn't actually do very well at No.6.For England I think Botham at 6 with bat clearly was very helpful many times , especially when he was a quality swing bowler and they had 4 other quality bowlers. He actually won them the 1981 Ashes series with those amazing centuries.
The risk is you have only 5 pure specialist bats but you have a bowling line-up you got to back to get 20 wickets if you consider it 5 bowlers which is essentially what the Poms had then.
Statistically, Sobers is very similar to Kallis. Miller is very similar to Khan.The reality is that most Test nations will never have the quality of allrounder of Garfield Sobers or Keith Miller.
Well, there was a period when he was probably their best bowler and also worth his spot as a hard-hitting No.6. Can't really complain about that.Flintoff was a bowler who batted quite well.
Again, that's not quite accurate. Not to be pedantic.Kallis a top class bat that handy 5th bowler for side. Botham a genuine bowler able to bat at number 6 without really being a specialist bat so you got 5 bowlers and a dangerous allrounder batting at number 6.
That depends on Mitch Marsh. If he shows he can average 35-plus at Test level, then it's curtains for Watson.Watson is not a top class bat but good enough 5th bowler and useful with bat at times to keep getting picked in an era we have been short on batting talent.
Dujon scored slightly more Test runs than Brad Haddin at a worse average.For West Indies in early to mid 80's they found keeper Jeff Dujon and he was a damn good bat for a number 7. Not quite specialist bat but very handy.
I'm not sure what constitutes a 'true all-rounder'.It just seems if you can find that true allrounder it can be the strongest Test team in world.
Maybe. It just highlights the ridiculousness of Watson batting at No.3, when he's basically hanging on because of his bowling.
If he goes to No.6 and is better performed than Mitch Marsh, then he's worth his spot. But Marsh is the future and Watson is not. How long before the young guy replaces the old guy?
Statistically, Sobers is very similar to Kallis.
Dujon scored slightly more Test runs than Brad Haddin at a worse average.
I'm not sure what constitutes a 'true all-rounder'.
I'd say if a player is basically good enough with bat or ball and handy with the other, then they are a very valuable player. If Watson was averaging high-30s with the bat and low-30s with the ball, he'd be one of the first guys picked. But both those numbers have drifted in the wrong direction, particularly the batting.
Or be close enough to the mark that they're not a liability.to me, without wanting to over-simplify things, an all-rounder has to demand selection in at least one of the two disciplines.
Marsh doesn't demand selection purely as a batsman or purely as a bowler. Neither does Watson.the situation with Watson's batting struggles and lack of durability as a bowling option has Mitch Marsh well positioned to stake a claim as a permanent replacement, if only Marsh's own fitness and form can hold up/improve. Marsh certainly looks a prospect to me, but does he demand selection purely as a batsman, or purely as a bowler?
A fifth bowler is pretty important these days, especially when we have so many injury-prone young pacemen. Are you confident any of the young quicks could bowl 400 overs at Test level in a calendar year and not break down? That kind of workload breaks a bowler.If not, then do we really need an all-rounder when we regularly produce bowlers who offer handy contributions with the bat (e.g. Johnson/Starc/Pattinson)? On the other hand, Test cricket can demand a lot of a bowling unit and a genuine fifth bowling option will always be welcome.
Bearing in mind that 400 overs in a calendar puts pacemen into a red zone from which they sometimes don't recover, there are a few options:
- always pick the three best quicks without an all-rounder, bowl them into the dirt and then act surprised when they break down
- accept that a rotation policy makes sense and begin shuffling 4-5 quicks on a regular basis, even though it contravenes the mantra of 'always picking the best available side'
- include a medium-pacer or a durable workhorse among the attack so soak up more overs than the express pacemen
- pick an all-rounder capable of holding down a spot in the top six while also capable of bowling 200 overs over the course of a calendar year
For a period, Watson ticked that box. But he's been short of runs for four years and there's now a guy 10 years younger who may be one of those emerging talents who warrants being earmarked and fast-tracked. If that's the case, it's curtains for Watson. To say nothing of Faulkner and Henriques, who I think could both average mid-30s with the bat and low-30s with the ball. Apparently that's the pass mark for Watson.
You have to go back years before that would be true. These days Henriques is comfortably better with the bat than Watson in the long format, and has more potential moving forward. I don't necessarily subscribe to the idea that Henriques should be in the team, but he is more deserving of it than Watson.Watto is still the best batting all-rounder in the country.
Great post and very perseptive. So much of the game of cricket, like golf, is between the ears ... particularly shot selection when batting.I've said this before, but IMO Watson is an excellent illustration of the Born vs Made argument.
Watson has a large collection of great technical movements, clearly honed through 1000s of hours facing the bowling machine. Even his one-time nickname of "Robot" reflected these movements. Each individual shot was technically perfect. His issue was with shot selection, and failure to work singles and gaps. He played the ball where it should be hit based on where that shot is "supposed" to go.
His bowling again was robotic, able to bowl consistently, with little or no variation.
His physique was (NTIGNTTAWWT) also "perfect" obviously something he worked very hard on.
All of the elements, which in isolation should have provided the outcome of the "perfect" player.
But...
It lacked the intangible "it", to bring it all together.
Over time, he has added nuances, especially with his bowling, but the batting has never come together as it could have.
Indeed the approach of "perfection" also played with Watson's mentality and possibly contributed to his seeming performance anxiety (90 and out).
Compare that to Smith (or Warner or Hughes for that matter) Incredible natural talent, unorthodox technique, flaws exposed early through higher levels, weaknesses worked on and now a far more dominant, free-flowing batsman.
Watson was the "completed product" when he arrived on the scene, such was his professionalism at junior/lower levels. Almost as if he had already completed a "finishing course" in coaching. Smith, Warner and Hughes either didn't have, or (more likely) didn't need that level of coaching at lower levels.
This combined, with the media/public fascination with the next big thing led to Watson's early performances being extrapolated out to expectations of a Sobers level career. In reality, he's not that far off Botham over his career, who has long been celebrated as a great all-rounder.
In reality, he's not that far off Botham over his career, who has long been celebrated as a great all-rounder.
I suspect Watson's bowling could be quite useful in England. He can swing it and get some nip off the pitch, if his body's up to it he could be very handy.
I've been frustrated by Watson over the years. But he should be picked by the selectors as an all-rounder. Therefore I'd say it is only fair to critique Watson on his contributions as an all-rounder. When compared to the best all-rounders of the past 40 years, his stats are actually OK ...
Watson ... 3,549 runs @ 35.49, 71 wickets @ 33.36 (5,100 balls)
Imran (regarded more as a bowling all-rounder) ... 3,807 runs @ 37.69, 362 wickets @ 22.61 (19,000+ balls)
Botham (more a batting all-rounder) ... 5,200 runs @ 33.54, 383 wickets @ 28.40 (21,800 balls)
Kallis ... 13,000 runs @ 55 (wow!), 292 wickets @ 32.65 (20,100 balls)
That's the frustration, because I think his bowling record could have been excellent had he been fit consistently.An all rounder who is unable to bowl. Awesome.
That's the frustration, because I think his bowling record could have been excellent had he been fit consistently.
Better than his batting could have been. That's how much I rate it.
I think Watson has done a serviceable job considering nobody else has put their hand up and made the spot their own.Pat Cummins and James Pattinson could be pretty awesome bowlers too.
Should we bat them at 3?
When compared to the best all-rounders of the past 40 years, his stats are actually OK ...
Watson ... 3,549 runs (4x 100s, 23x 50s) @ 35.49, 71 wickets @ 33.36, SR 72.5 (5,100 balls)
Imran (regarded more as a bowling all-rounder) ... 3,807 runs @ 37.69, 362 wickets @ 22.61 (19,000+ balls)
Botham (more a batting all-rounder) ... 5,200 runs @ 33.54, 383 wickets @ 28.40 (21,800 balls)
Kallis ... 13,000 runs @ 55 (wow!), 292 wickets @ 32.65 (20,100 balls)
I think Watson has done a serviceable job considering nobody else has put their hand up and made the spot their own.
He's been thrust up the order out of necessity and done his best. Ideally someone will take the spot and make him fight with Marsh for 6.