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#johnny briggs

4 incidents tagged

🥊Serious

Johnny Briggs's Epileptic Fit at Headingley — The End of a Test Career, 1899

England v Australia

1899-06-30

On the night of 29-30 June 1899, after the first day of England's first Test at Headingley, Lancashire's left-arm spinner Johnny Briggs — already a 33-Test veteran with 118 wickets — suffered a violent epileptic fit at the team hotel. He was admitted to Cheadle Royal Hospital. He played one more season of county cricket in 1900 before relapses forced him to a sanatorium. He died in 1902 aged 39 — the first Test cricketer known to have died of an epilepsy-related illness.

#johnny-briggs#1899#headingley
Moderate

Lancashire's First Title — 1897 County Championship

Lancashire CCC

1897-08-30

Lancashire won their first official County Championship in 1897, narrowly edging Surrey, with a bowling attack of Briggs, Cuttell, Mold and Hallam taking 420 wickets between them. Captain Archie MacLaren — the same MacLaren of the 424 at Taunton in 1895 — averaged 41 with the bat. The 1897 title broke Surrey's hold on the early Championship and is the only one of Lancashire's nine official Championships from the 19th century.

#lancashire#1897#county-championship
Serious

Johnny Briggs' 15 for 28 — Cape Town Slaughter, 1889

South Africa v England

1889-03-25

On 25-26 March 1889 at Newlands, Lancashire's Johnny Briggs took 7 for 17 and 8 for 11 against South Africa — match figures of 15 for 28, of which 14 were bowled and one lbw. It set a new Test record for match wickets that lasted until SF Barnes in 1913, and remains one of the most economical 15-wicket hauls in any form of cricket.

#johnny-briggs#1889#cape-town
Serious

Johnny Briggs — Lancashire's Spinner-Batsman, 1879-1900

Lancashire / England

1888-08-31

Johnny Briggs of Lancashire was the most engaging all-round cricketer of the 1880s — a popular fielder, a left-arm slow bowler who could turn the ball sharply, and a hard-hitting middle-order batsman with one Test century to his name (121 at Melbourne in 1885). He became the first bowler in Test cricket to take 100 wickets, in February 1895, and finished his career with 118 wickets at 17.75. He suffered an epileptic seizure during the Headingley Test of 1899, returned to play one further season, and died in Cheadle Royal Asylum in January 1902 aged 39.

#johnny-briggs#lancashire#left-arm-spin