He was a medium pace seam bowler, who took over 400 first-class wickets spanning a twelve-year period between 1974 and 1986.
He is however best remembered not for his bowling but for his inept batting, managing a career average of just over 3 runs per innings, which is the second-lowest by any regular first-class cricketer ahead of Francis McHugh of Yorkshire and Gloucestershire.
[3][4] Griffiths’ batting was considered so inferior that his local club nicknamed him "the world’s worst batsman" and "the wally of the willow".
Ironically however, perhaps Griffiths’ most celebrated achievement in his cricketing career came with the bat; playing Lancashire in the 1981 Natwest Trophy semi-final on Northamptonshire's home ground, Griffiths came in at number 11 with fellow tail-ender Tim Lamb still needing 13 runs to win, with one of the world’s most fearsome fast bowlers of the period, Michael Holding, running in at one end.
Somehow, both Griffiths and Lamb stood firm and held on, managing to accumulate the runs required, with Griffiths getting off the mark after twenty-nine balls and hitting the winning run and being carried off shoulder high by the partisan crowd.