Peter Briggs (squash player) explained

Peter Briggs is the longtime Director of Squash of The Apawamis Club in Rye, New York, and a member of the U.S. Squash Hall of Fame.

Early career

Peter Sheffield Briggs, the son of English parents and a native of Greenwich, Connecticut, first learned squash at The Field Club in his home town.[1] He continued to pursue racquet sports at Middlesex School in Concord, Massachusetts where he also excelled in soccer. Briggs played #1 on the tennis team for 3 years and served as its captain in 1968 and 1969. He was considered one of the Private School Tennis League's best players.[2] In his senior year he claimed a victory in the Class A competition over David Talbott from Deerfield (the brother of his future doubles partner Mark Talbott) in the 1969 New England Squash Tournament.[3] He also led Middlesex to the team title in squash.[4]

As a freshman at Harvard University, he secured the top seed spot on the varsity squash team and was ranked #1 in the country.[5] An intercollegiate champion,[6] Briggs became Captain of the Crimson squash team and Harvard won the NCAA title that year. His squash coach at Harvard was Jack Barnaby, considered by many to be the most successful coach in Harvard history;[7] Barnaby also coached Briggs in tennis.

In January 1973, Briggs would win the singles final at the 31st Apawamis Club Invitational, nearly 15 years before he would become the head pro there.[8] He finished his senior year, receiving a BA in Classics. Immediately after graduation, Briggs was hired to co-coach the Radcliffe tennis and squash teams with a fellow squash teammate, Dan Gordon.[9] That same year, he also co-founded a sports apparel business named Boast with a group of fellow Ivy League athletes.[10] A lefthander, Briggs won the Apawamis Invitational again in 1975.[11]

Adept at both squash singles and doubles, Briggs went on to win the US Squash Doubles Championship in 1976 with partner Ralph Howe. In the same year, he won the Mexican Nationals in singles, the Canadian Doubles and the U.S. Nationals in singles. Howe would be his partner for four years.

At the same time that he competed on the courts, Briggs held a day job as a corporate trader at Kidder, Peabody & Co.[12] eventually moving to Merrill Lynch. Squash won him over in 1984 and his career changed directions after almost 10 years in the financial arena.

Coaching

Briggs was hired as head squash coach and the assistant tennis coach at Cornell for 4 years starting in 1984.[13] He guided his squash players to a 58-39 record. Under his leadership, the 1987-88 Cornell squash team became the first Cornell squash team to finish nationally in the top 10 (they ranked 9 at the end of their season). That same year his personal squash record expanded as he won no fewer than six professional events with four different partners and also won the US Mixed Doubles Championship with partner Joyce Davenport.[14] [15] His doubles partners included Mark Talbott with whom he was partnered in 1984 [16] and 1985.[17]

To Cornell's disappointment, Briggs left in 1988 to begin coaching squash at The Apawamis Club downstate in Westchester. Under his more than three decade tenure, the squash program has regularly trained nationally ranked male and female students, many of whom have gone on to compete at or become captains of top Northeast collegiate teams including Harvard, Yale, Princeton University, Trinity College, Middlebury College and Amherst College.[18] [19] Even while coaching at Apawamis, Briggs continued to personally compete in tournaments. In 1989 he played on the U.S. team at the World Championships in Kuala Lumpur with his friend Mark Talbott and others.[20]

Awards

Briggs received recognition as a member of the Harvard Squash Hall of Fame, Class of 1996 for being a three-time All-Ivy and All-American.[21] His prep school alma mater, Middlesex, elected him to their Hall of Fame in 2003. In 2005, he was inducted into the US Squash Hall of Fame in recognition of his positive impact and influence on the sport.[22]

Philanthropy

The competitive biennial Briggs Doubles Cup benefiting CitySquash is named for him and considered one of the premier tournaments on the circuit.[23] Briggs was himself a Board Member of this urban youth enrichment program which raises scholarship funds for academically oriented students and has been based at Fordham University since 2002.[24] [25] [26] [27] [28] [29] The Briggs Cup has been held every two years since 2003 and offers the largest monetary prize on the tour circuit. As the first of its kind, the tournament has become a model of fundraising for urban youth programs all over the United States.[30] The Briggs Cup attracts the top players in the world not only because it is "the biggest event of the season, but it’s one of the best run events on the tour" according to one of the top entrants.[31]

Personal life

Briggs first marriage ended amicably in divorce. He and his wife Diane live in Pound Ridge. He has two sons and a daughter.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Peter Briggs, An Untarnished Legend. May 21, 2013. Rye Record. Tom McDermott. September 14, 2019.
  2. News: The Boston Globe. Boston. The Private School Tennis League. May 14, 1969.
  3. News: The Boston Globe. Boston. Boston Hoop Playoffs Will Open Tomorrow. Nancy Green. February 25, 1969.
  4. Web site: Hall of Fame. Middlesex School. 2003. January 12, 2020.
  5. News: The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. March 23, 1972. Named No. 1 in the country, Harvard's Briggs hits top in squash. Bob Monahan.
  6. News: The Ithaca Journal. April 10, 1972. Ivy Squash Stars Picked.
  7. Web site: Legendary Tennis, Squash Coach Dies at 92. The Crimson. February 20, 2002. David Weinfeld.
  8. News: The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. January 15, 1973. Apawamis Squash.
  9. Web site: Two Harvard Seniors to Coach Radcliffe Tennis and Squash. The Harvard Crimson. May 23, 1973. January 11, 2020.
  10. Web site: About, Sporting the Leaf since 1973. Boast, Inc.. January 12, 2020.
  11. News: The Rye Chronicle. January 16, 1975. Briggs Wins Title In Apawamis Club Squash Tourney. 11.
  12. Web site: Diane J. Brown, Peter S. Briggs to Wed Aug. 27. New York Times. March 27, 1977. January 11, 2020.
  13. News: The Ithaca Journal. New York. August 18, 1984. Cornell Names Two New Head Coaches.
  14. News: The Philadelphia Inquirer. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Squash. April 16, 1984.
  15. Book: Squash: A History of the Game. James Zug. 2003. Scribner. 268.
  16. News: National Post. Ontario, Canada. November 28, 1988. Mark Talbot Just for the Record.
  17. News: The Daily News. New York. March 3, 1985. Talbott-Briggs, the Team to "Squash".
  18. Web site: SPORTS; A County Of Squash, And Talent Homegrown. Irena Choi Stern. New York Times. April 18, 2004. September 15, 2019.
  19. News: The Journal News. June 26, 2006. Endresen's Work Pays Off,Squash player qualifies for world championship event. Pat DiSalvo.
  20. Web site: Mark Talbott: A Very Good Friend. squashmagazine.ussquash.com. January 11, 2016.
  21. Web site: Peter S. Briggs '73 Squash- Hall of Fame Class of 1996 Harvard Athletic Achievements. Harvard Varsity Club. 1996. January 11, 2020.
  22. Web site: Hall of Fame. US Squash. 2005. September 15, 2019.
  23. Web site: Briggs Cup. US Squash. November 2013. Steve Mandel, Peer Pedersen. January 13, 2020.
  24. Web site: Facility Partners. CitySquash. January 13, 2020.
  25. Web site: LED BY BRIGGS CUP,FUNDRAISERS GIVE CITYSQUASH BOOST. 2005. CitySquash. January 11, 2020.
  26. Web site: MATHUR & MUDGE SURGE TO LIFT BIENNIAL BRIGGS CUP. SDA Pro Tour. December 12, 2017. September 15, 2019.
  27. Web site: A History Of Squash At Apawamis: An Ongoing Tradition Of Excellence. March 20, 2012. Rob Dinerman. DailySquashReport.com.
  28. Web site: SQUASH MAGAZINE 2015 TOP FIFTY ANNOUNCED. October 14, 2015. September 15, 2019.
  29. Web site: Corner Man. December 1, 2006. Forbes. September 15, 2019.
  30. Web site: MUDGE & GOULD WIN FIRST BRIGGS CUP IN PARTNERSHIP'S SWAN SONG. December 15, 2015. Squash Doubles Association. January 11, 2020.
  31. Web site: Mathur Claims Third Briggs Cup, Callis Celebrates First. Squash Doubles Association Pro Tour. January 5, 2020.