Tap & Run - Pre test dinner - 060.jpg
Regional Events

Scotland Christmas Lunch with Jonathan Agnew

Venue: The Kimpton Hotel

Join the Scotland Lord’s Taverners at our fabulous Christmas Lunch at the Kimpton Hotel with guest speaker Jonathan Agnew.

The voice of BBC Test Match Special, Jonathan Agnew, has been confirmed as the main speaker for our Scotland region’s Christmas Lunch at the Kimpton Hotel in Edinburgh on Friday 6 December.

Aggers will have many amusing anecdotes to share from his playing and broadcasting career where he has played with, and commentated on, some of the best players and characters in game’s history.

There will be a raffle, silent and live auction taking place during the event to raise funds for our cricket programmes in Scotland and help us to continue empowering young people through cricket. The live auction will be conducted by “The Edinburgh Lawyer” Willie Hunter.

For tickets and more information, please contact David Hughes at LordstavernersSCO@lordstaverners.org

Jonathan Agnew's career as the BBC's cricket correspondent has been so successful, it's easy to forget that he ever played the game. But, as a thrusting seam bowler in the 1980s, he played three Tests for England before taking up his position in the commentary box. Agnew embodies the authoritative, but endearingly juvenile approach of the Test Match Special team, and as a player he was always looking for the fun element of the game. When conditions were in his favour, Agnew could be genuinely quick, although he abandoned out-and-out pace in favour of more control in 1987, and enjoyed his best season with 101 wickets for Leicestershire. The most consistent English pace bowler in county cricket in 1987 and 1988, he was ignored by selectors despite a dearth of fast bowling talent. Agnew was drafted into the Leicestershire side in 1978 on the back of an excellent season for Uppingham (37 wickets at 8) and he took a wicket with his fourth ball in first-class cricket.

In 1984 he won his first caps, against West Indies and Sri Lanka, and the following summer made his final appearance, against Australia. He struggled in all three games. In 1987 he began work as a sports producer with BBC Radio Leicester, in 1988 wrote an entertaining book on the life of a county pro - Eight Days A Week - and in 1990-91 covered England in Australia for the now defunct Today newspaper. Later that year he retired at the age of 30 on being appointed as the BBC's cricket correspondent. He had one last day in the sun. In 1992 he answered a plea by an injury-strapped Leicestershire to appear for them in the NatWest semi-final; he took 1 for 31 in 12 parsimonious overs to help to his old side through to the final.

Aggers-GettyImages-2161776393-croppedcopy.jpg

Event information

Venue

The Kimpton Hotel

Date

Friday 6 December 2024

Price

£85 per person

Includes

Welcome drinks and lunch

Timings

12:00 - Drinks reception

12:30 - Lunch

5pm - Finish

Dress code
Smart

Event location

Get directions

Cookies and URLs (Unique Resource Locators). We use cookies, URLs, and other similar user information for the purposes of providing statistical data on the usage of our web and other digital channels. This data is quantitative and may include geographic and other limited demographic information. We do not use cookies or URL information for the purposes of identifying individual users, or for providing a basis for a tailored experience to you.