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Controversies in 1889

7 incidents documented

Serious

South Africa's First Test — Port Elizabeth, 1889

South Africa v England

1889-03-12

On 12-13 March 1889, at St George's Park, Port Elizabeth, South Africa became the third Test-playing nation. England, captained by C Aubrey Smith — later a Hollywood actor — won by 8 wickets inside two days. Smith took 5 for 19 in the first innings, his only Test wickets; Owen Dunell, the South African captain, became the first man to lose a Test toss for South Africa.

#south-africa#first-test#1889
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
😂Mild

Aubrey Smith — From England Captain to Hollywood Patriarch

England (cricket) / Hollywood (film)

1889-03-12

C Aubrey Smith captained England in his only Test in 1889, took 5 for 19, and never played another international. Forty-three years later, the same man — now a Hollywood character actor in his seventies — founded the Hollywood Cricket Club, persuaded Boris Karloff and David Niven to play, and lived in Beverly Hills until his death in 1948. The arc from St George's Park to Beverly Hills is one of cricket's strangest biographies.

#aubrey-smith#hollywood#1889
Moderate

The First Wisden Cricketers of the Year — Six Great Bowlers, 1889

England / Australia

1889-04-15

Wisden's 1889 Almanack inaugurated what became the most prestigious individual award in cricket: the Cricketers of the Year. The first list — picked by editor Charles Pardon to mark the bowler-dominated 1888 summer — named six Great Bowlers: George Lohmann, Bobby Peel, Johnny Briggs (England), Charlie Turner, JJ Ferris and Sammy Woods (Australia). Between them they had taken 1,272 wickets in 1888 at 11.89 apiece.

#wisden#1889#cricketers-of-the-year
Moderate

The Currie Cup — South Africa's First-Class Foundation, 1889

South African colonies

1889-04-05

Sir Donald Currie, the Scottish-born shipping magnate who funded England's 1888-89 tour of South Africa, donated a trophy at the end of the trip for an inter-colonial cricket competition. The first Currie Cup was contested in 1889-90 — a single-match competition won by Kimberley over Transvaal. It became the foundational competition of South African first-class cricket.

#currie-cup#south-africa#1889
Moderate

C. Aubrey Smith — 'Round-the-Corner' and First England Captain in South Africa

England v South Africa

1889-03-12

Charles Aubrey Smith was a tall fast-medium Sussex amateur with one of the strangest run-ups in cricket history — a sweeping curve that started from deep mid-off or even from behind the umpire and brought him in at the crease from an unexpected angle. WG Grace remarked it was 'rather startling when he suddenly appears at the bowling crease'. In March 1889, Smith captained the first English side to play a Test in South Africa, took 5/19 in the first innings of that Test, and remains the only player ever to captain England in his one and only Test appearance.

#aubrey-smith#round-the-corner#fast-bowler
Moderate

Bernard Tancred — First Man to Carry His Bat in a Test, 1889

South Africa v England

1889-03-26

On 26 March 1889 at Newlands, Cape Town, Augustus Bernard Tancred batted through a South African innings of 47 all out, finishing 26 not out as Johnny Briggs took 8 for 11 around him. The performance was modest in raw terms but historic: Tancred became the first batsman to carry his bat through a completed innings in Test cricket. His unbeaten 26 out of 47 remains the lowest score by anyone carrying their bat through a Test innings, more than 130 years later.

#bernard-tancred#south-africa#carried-bat