Education
In the season as a whole he finished with 1,858 runs at an average of more than 50, with five centuries.
In the season as a whole he finished with 1,858 runs at an average of more than 50, with five centuries.
Jack Bryan was a left-handed opening batsman and an occasional bowler of highly-spun leg breaks and googlies. He played for Kent"s second eleven before the First World War, and then again in 1919, before he went to Cambridge. So strong was the Cambridge side of 1920 that he was not picked for any first-class matches.
1921 proved, though, to be the only full season of first-class cricket that Bryan played.
Becoming a schoolmaster at Street Andrew"s School in Eastbourne, he was able to play for Kent only in the second half of each season from 1922, though he occasionally played earlier matches in the Gentlemen v Players series. He never reached 1,000 runs in a season again, but he continued through the 1920s to make centuries and to average, in several seasons, around 35 runs per innings.
He was very strong playing in front of the wicket, and tended to build his innings cautiously at first, though he could score very fast later in longer innings. Bryan"s nearest approach to Test cricket came when he was picked for the 1924-1925 Master Control Console tour to Australia, taking leave of absence from his teaching job.
But with Jack Hobbs and Herbert Sutcliffe in the side, plus other opening batsmen available, he was not selected for any of the Test matches.
Bryan faded from the first-class cricket scene in the early 1930s, making his final appearance for Kent in 1932 and playing his last first-class match the following year. In all, he scored more than 8,000 first-class runs at an average of 36 runs per innings.