An all-rounder is a cricketer who regularly performs well at both batting and bowling in game.-Jacques Kallis

There is no precise qualification for a player to be considered an all-rounder and use of the term tends to be subjective. The generally accepted criterion is that a "genuine all-rounder" is someone whose batting or bowling skills, considered alone, would be good enough to win him/her a place in the team. Another definition of a "genuine all-rounder" is a player who can through both batting and bowling (though not necessarily both in the same match), consistently "win matches for the team" (i.e., propel his/her team to victory by an outstanding individual performance). By either definition, a genuine all-rounder is quite rare and extremely valuable to a team, effectively operating as two players.

Confusion sometimes arises when a specialist bowler performs well with the bat. For example, West Indies pace bowler Malcolm Marshall achieved ten scores of 50 or above in 107 Test innings between 1978 and 1991, but had a batting average of less than 19. He would be termed a "useful lower-order batsman", or indeed "a bowler who bats a bit". Equally, a specialist batsman/woman may be termed a "useful change bowler" and a good example of this is Australian Allan Border, who in a Test match against the West Indies in Sydney in January 1989 took 11 wickets for 96 runs (7/46 in the first innings and 4/50 in the second) as the conditions suited his occasionally used left-arm spin.

One of the main constraints to becoming a recognised all-rounder is that batsmen/women and bowlers "peak" at different ages. Batsmen/women tend to reach their peak in their late twenties after their technique has matured through experience. Conversely, fast bowlers often peak in their early to mid twenties at the height of their physical prowess. Other bowlers, mostly spinners but also fast bowlers who can "swing" the ball, are most effective in their later careers.




- List of Top 10 all-rounder's in All Formats -


Top 10 In Test

  1. Jason Holder
  2. Ravichandran Ashwin
  3. Ravindra Jadeja
  4. Shakib Al Hasan
  5. Mitchell Starc
  6. Ben Stokes
  7. Kyle Jaminson
  8. Pat Cummins
  9. Chris Woakes
  10. Colin De Grandhomme

Top 10 In One-day's

  1. Shakib Al Hasan
  2. Mohammad Nabi
  3. Chris Woakes
  4. Rashid Khan
  5. Mitchell Santner
  6. Ben Stokes
  7. Colin De Grandhomme
  8. Imad Wasim
  9. Ravindra Jadeja
  10. Sikandar Raza

Top 10 In T-20's

  1. Mohammad Nabi
  2. Shakib Al Hasan
  3. Liam Livingstone
  4. Glenn Maxwell
  5. Wanindu Hasranga
  6. Zeeshan Maqusood
  7. JJ Smit
  8. Adian Markram
  9. Moeen Ali
  10. Mitchell Marsh