We love cricket all rounders (players who can both bat and bowl). These players are great assets for their teams and captains love 'em. So, who are the best all rounders in World Cup Cricket history?
Kapil, Steve Waugh and Jayasuriya have all performed really well but Imran Khan takes the lead based with high wickets/game. He has one of the highest wickets/game (1.8 wickets/game) and a great batting average (28 runs/game) - only 3 runs short of Jayasuriya and Steve Waugh's runs/game.
Imran was a great competitor and a fearless leader.
Bubble size indicates the all rounder index --> (Total runs scored in World Cup games/Max. total runs scored by all rounders in World Cup games) + (Total wickets in World Cup games/Max. total wickets by all rounders in World Cup games). The all rounder index is a simple calculation and has some limitations:
- It favors players who've played more games
- It doesn't take into account bowling economy and batting scoring rate
The data for this analysis is in following form.
Update (Sep 16, 2010) >> Bernard recently commented that Lance Klusener seems like the best all rounder from the above plot. Lance was of course a great player and we all loved watching him bowl fast deliveries and also hit bowlers all around the park as an aggressive batsman.
Table 1 has the all rounder data based on which I picked Imran Khan as the best. Here's a quick comparison between Klusener and Imran.
1) Lance Klusener was really a bowler who could bat, whereas Imran was a thorough all rounder. Table 2 clearly demonstrates it.
- Although Imran played ~ twice the number of matches compared to Klusener, Imran faced 3.6 times more balls than Lance while batting
- Klusener's contribution to his team's victory was more from his bowling than his batting i.e. his side depended on him more for his bowling than his batting (see the contrast in Imran's and Klusener's "% wins when scored 50+" column in Table 2. Imran's high scores resulted in his side's victory 80% of times, whereas Klusener's high scores resulted in his team's victory only 33% of times)
2) Imran Khan took 1.5 times more wickets than Lance and scored 2 times as many runs (back in the days with no fielding restrictions), and captained his side to World Cup championship.
In my mind, Imran is the best all rounder although I would have loved my childhood hero, Kapil Dev, to be #1 but the data suggests otherwise.
Table 1: World Cup Cricket all rounder data
| Country | Player | Runs/Game | Wickets/Game | Total Runs Scored | Total.Wickets | |
| 1 | Australia | TM Moody | 21.93 | 0.93 | 329 | 14 |
| 2 | Australia | SR Waugh | 31.79 | 1.04 | 922 | 27 |
| 3 | India | N Kapil Dev | 29.09 | 1.12 | 669 | 28 |
| 4 | India | M Amarnath | 21.17 | 1.33 | 254 | 16 |
| 5 | India | Yuvraj Singh | 28.92 | 1 | 376 | 5 |
| 6 | New Zealand | CZ Harris | 21.55 | 1.19 | 431 | 31 |
| 7 | New Zealand | SB Styris | 47.94 | 0.81 | 767 | 13 |
| 8 | Pakistan | Imran Khan | 27.75 | 1.79 | 666 | 34 |
| 9 | Pakistan | Abdul Razzaq | 20.69 | 1.08 | 269 | 14 |
| 10 | South Africa | L Klusener | 37.78 | 2 | 340 | 22 |
| 11 | Sri Lanka | ST Jayasuriya | 31.92 | 0.83 | 1149 | 25 |
| 12 | Zimbabwe | KM Curran | 26.09 | 0.9 | 287 | 9 |
Table 2: Comparison between Lance Klusener and Imran Khan's performance in World Cup Cricket
Batting
| Player | ODI played | Total Runs Scored | Total Balls Faced | Centuries | Fifties | Runs/ Game | % wins when scored 50+ |
| Imran Khan | 28 | 666 | 1014 | 1 | 4 | 27.75 | 80 |
| L Klusener | 12 | 340 | 283 | 0 | 3 | 37.78 | 33 |
Bowling
| Player | ODI played | Total Wickets | Total Overs Bowled | % wins when took 3+ wickets | Economy | Wickets/ Game | Maidens/ Game |
| Imran Khan | 28 | 34 | 168.9 | 60 | 3.88 | 1.79 | 0.95 |
| L Klusener | 12 | 22 | 87.5 | 100 | 4.64 | 2 | 0.55 |
CLEARLY THE BEST IS LANCE KLUSNER!!!
ReplyDeleteBernard, thanks for sharing your pick. I've updated the post with all rounder data and compared Klusener and Imran Khan's world cup cricket records to share why I picked Imran. Your thoughts?
ReplyDeleteMaidens per game is a very unfair statistic, since Imran played most of his games in an era of lower scoring rates and more maidens. Also, you don't seem to talk about batting strike rate, in which Klusener is surely miles ahead. Plus you seem to be penalizing Klusener for being the lone ranger on some occasions, rather like people sometimes do with Sachin.
ReplyDeleteThat said, Imran was clearly one of the very best, and could even be *the* best allrounder in world cups.