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#wisden 1889

3 incidents tagged

Serious

JJ Ferris — Turner's Left-Arm Partner and Two-Country Bowler

Australia / England (one tour)

1888-09-30

John James Ferris was the left-arm partner who shared the new ball with Charlie Turner through the great Australian bowling years of the late 1880s. He took 61 Test wickets in only 9 matches at 12.70 apiece — one of the best averages in Test history — was a Wisden Cricketer of the Year in 1889, and later qualified for England by residence and toured South Africa as an Englishman in 1891-92, taking 13 wickets in his only Test for his second country. He died of typhoid fever in Durban in 1900, aged 33.

#jj-ferris#left-arm#australia
Moderate

Bobby Peel — Yorkshire's Slow Left-Armer Emerges, 1882-1888

Yorkshire / England

1888-08-31

Bobby Peel of Yorkshire was the second great left-arm spinner of his county after Edmund Peate, and quickly the better of the two. He made his first-class debut in 1882, became Yorkshire's first-choice slow left-armer when Peate was sacked for drunkenness in 1887, took 100 wickets a season for the next decade and was named one of the first six Wisden Cricketers of the Year in 1889. By 1888 he was already England's frontline spinner, sharing 27-wicket days with Lohmann at Lord's against Australia.

#bobby-peel#yorkshire#left-arm-spin
Serious

George Lohmann — Surrey's All-Rounder Emerges, 1884-1888

Surrey / England

1885-08-31

George Alfred Lohmann was the Surrey amateur-turned-professional who became, by 1888, the deadliest English bowler of his generation. He played his first county match in 1884, took 142 first-class wickets and 571 runs in 1885, and made his Test debut in 1886. He went on to take Test wickets at 10.75 — the lowest career average of any Test bowler in history with 50+ wickets — and to record a strike rate (34.1) that no one has ever bettered. By the end of the 1880s he was as central to England's bowling attack as Spofforth had been to Australia's.

#george-lohmann#surrey#1880s