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Arthur Fagg

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Full name
  
Arthur Edward Fagg

Batting style
  
Right-handed

Name
  
Arthur Fagg

Bowling style
  
Right-arm medium

Role
  
Cricket Player

National side
  

Arthur Fagg st2cricketcountrycomwpcontentuploadscricket

Born
  
18 June 1915 (
1915-06-18
)
Chartham, Kent, England

Last Test
  
22 July 1939 v West Indies

Died
  
September 13, 1977, Royal Tunbridge Wells, United Kingdom

Test debut (cap 291)
  
25 July 1936 v India

Arthur Edward Fagg (18 June 1915 – 13 September 1977) was an English cricketer who played for Kent County Cricket Club and the English cricket team.

Arthur Fagg wwwalloutcricketcomwpcontentuploads201406A

A right-handed opening batsman who first played for Kent at the age of 17, Fagg was a Test match player at 21 against India in 1936. He caught rheumatic fever on the tour of Australia the following winter, and missed the whole of the 1937 season.

The evidence was strong in 1938 that Fagg was back to his best form. He set a first-class world record playing for Kent against Essex at Colchester, scoring 244 in the first innings and an undefeated 202 in the second innings in a drawn match, becoming the only batsman in first-class cricket history to score double centuries in both innings of a match. The 1938 season was a year of record-breaking, and the young Leonard Hutton cemented his place as England's first choice opener with his 364 against the Australians at The Oval.

Fagg played only one more Test, though he remained a consistent scorer in county cricket until the mid-1950s. In all, he scored 58 centuries and more than 25,000 runs.

After retirement, he became a cricket umpire, officiating in eighteen Test matches and seven One Day Internationals. In an incident at Edgbaston in 1973, he refused to take the field after the West Indies team disputed one of his decisions.

References

Arthur Fagg Wikipedia