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The autobiography on one of cricket's best-loved characters. With
his trademark bow tie, his distinctive rich, plumy voice and his
eccentric observations Henry Blofeld is one of Britain's prized
experts. He has been close to the heart of the game for over 40
years. As a leading commentator on Test Match Special and cricket
writer, at home and abroad, he has informed and entertained wide
audiences with his extensive knowledge and perception of cricket at
the very highest level. Last year Henry Blofeld was forced by major
heart surgery to take stock of his life and here in this
autobiography he offers sharp pictures and vivid memories, a few
sad, and many humorous.
Legendary cricket broadcaster Henry Blofeld takes the reader on a
journey from A-Z through the world of cricket. In his trademark
charming style, Blowers goes through the alphabet, explaining some
of the puzzling cricket terminology and regaling his favourite
anecdotes from his fifty years in the sport, covering the most
important moments in the sport's history as well as the most
entertaining and amusing. The book will also contain a glossary for
those who want to make sure they know their googlys from their
bouncers. This gift book is perfect for fans of cricket who want to
understand the sport from Henry's unique point of view, it is a
humorous and entertaining jaunt through the cricket landscape.
This is a compelling and irreverent account of a sport that
originated in 16th century England and was then gradually fed to
the British Empire; nowadays, of course England are regularly
outplayed by most of the commonwealth countries. The author's
probing research has uncovered hitherto unrevealed secret scandals
amongst the governing bodies of the game and of the complex lives
of some of the great heroes of the past and present day. He reveals
the plots and sub-plots that have, it can now be said, livened up
the MCC Committee meetings at Lord's over the years. Totally
outrageous, written with Henry Blofeld's contagious sense of
humour, Cricket and All That shows cricket as a game that has had a
profound effect on the very structure of English life.
'Is there anything in sport to compare with the sustained
excitement of a cricket match, especially a Test match, in which
the advantage continually fluctuates one way and then the other,
and when the match enters its last few minutes, all four results
are still possible?' After entertaining countless radio listeners
around the world for decades, who better to convey the breathless
drama of a Test match cliffhanger than Henry Blofeld? Now, in Ten
to Win . . . and the Last Man In, he has personally selected thirty
matches featuring unforgettable finishes and brought them vividly
to life again in his own inimitable way. Ranging from the
match-winning bowling of F.R. Spofforth against W.G. Grace's
England in 1882, via the first tied Test between Benaud's Australia
and Worrell's West Indies in 1960, to the never-say-die batting of
Ben Stokes in 2019, he picks out the key events and performances of
each memorable match and describes them as only he can. Alongside
the big-hitting heroics of Jessop in 1902 and Botham in 1981, he
revisits less celebrated matches such as South Africa's hard-fought
first Test win in 1906, as well as a crucial innings from Denis
Compton in 1948 and a match-saving performance by a young Alan
Knott in Guyana in 1968 - one of the most exciting matches he has
ever witnessed first-hand. Filled with colourful detail and
informed by insight gained from a lifetime immersed in the sport he
loves, Henry Blofeld's latest book will leave the reader in no
doubt - as he himself puts it - about 'what an absurdly
irresistible game cricket can be'.
When Kerry Packer appeared on the cricket scene in the late
seventies he revolutionised the game. Today's followers are used to
coloured clothing and all the other razzmatazz that is now a part
of cricket, but back in 1977 Packer's intervention was divisive and
nearly broke the game completely. Players were ostracised by their
nations and for a while it looked as if cricket might not survive.
Henry Blofeld observed the goings on from his position as both a
cricket commentator and writer. In 1978 he compiled a detailed
account of the events that unfolded, aided by his interviews with
Packer, as well as the deposed English captain Tony Grieg. He
witnessed at first hand the Packer Tests in Australia, The
Australia-India Test series, MCC play Pakistan and New Zealand, and
finally the young Australian side that took on the 'Packer-filled'
West Indies. In a mere seven-week period he witnessed all the then
six Test-playing nations playing Test cricket. The first time that
had been possible. The Man Who Coloured Cricket is Henry Blofeld's
detailed document that also shows concern for the human dimensions
of the controversy. The varied reaction of the English county
players; overseas players; the legal tussles; the complex and
surprising character of Packer himself, and the establishment
figures with whom he did battle, are strands of the story expertly
woven together to make The Man Who Coloured Cricket a dramatic and
moving story.
Between 1967-69 Henry Blofeld was fortunate to witness cricket on
three continents. He followed the great West Indies side captained
by Garry Sobers through its home series against England - to the
1968-9 Australian tour, and finally their early summer '69 tour of
England. Two main themes are explored throughout: The gradual
demise of the West Indian side that included the likes of Lance
Gibbs, Basil Butcher and Deryck Murray - but which also saw the
emergence of future greats such as Clive Lloyd - and the link
between a country's topography, style and endemic characteristics
with the type of cricket it plays. These threads are skilfully
woven together to highlight great cricketing moments and analyse
the humour and style of both the Australians and West Indians with
thoughtful insight.
As a widely respected cricket historian, with an encyclopaedic
knowledge of the game, and also a writer with a great sense of fun,
Henry Blofeld is the ideal man to select the great characters of
cricket who have livened up the sport. We learn of the exploits of
the legendary Ian Botham, a man who made up his own rules and has
been at the centre of controversy on countless occasions; Garry
Sobers, an immensely popular all-round great; and Dennis Lillee,
the temperamental fast bowler who once held up a game with a
tantrum when ordered to change his aluminium bat. Henry Blofeld
regales us with marvellous - sometimes mischievous - stories to add
to the "Boy's Own" nature of the book, and highlights those players
who would make cricket lovers cancel their appointments to see
them, even on a cold April day.
Legendary cricket broadcaster Henry Blofeld takes the reader on a
journey from A-Z through the world of cricket. In his trademark
charming style, Blowers goes through the alphabet, explaining some
of the puzzling cricket terminology and regaling his favourite
anecdotes from his fifty years in the sport. This gift book is
perfect for fans of cricket who want to understand the sport from
Henry's unique point of view - this is a humorous and entertaining
jaunt through the cricket landscape.
For over half a century, Henry Blofeld has conveyed his unfailing
enthusiasm for the game of cricket as a much loved broadcaster and
journalist. His characteristically patrician tones, overlaid with
those of the bon viveur, have delighted listeners to the BBC's Test
Match Special where the personality of the broadcaster comes second
only to a deep knowledge of the game and its players. With his
engaging conversational tone it is easy to see why listeners feel
as if they are actually at the Test match watching in Henry's
friendly company. Now that 'Blowers' has decided to declare his TMS
innings closed, his book reveals the secrets of life in the
commentary box and of the rich cast of characters with whom he
shared it, from the early days of John Arlott and Brian Johnson to
Aggers and new boys Boycott, Swann, Vaughan and Tuffers. Henry is
equally revealing of his own performances and self-deprecatingly
recalls his several verbal misfortunes while live broadcasting.
Like the greatest commentators and writers on the game Blofeld has
always understood that there is a world beyond the cricket field.
Not forgetting pigeons passing, red buses and much loved cricket
grounds, Henry Blofeld writes of his favourite countries, and
experiences while travelling, and meeting and interviewing many
cricket-loving celebrities. His passionate and entertaining book
will become one of the classics of cricket's literature.
'Is there anything in sport to compare with the sustained
excitement of a cricket match, especially a Test match, in which
the advantage continually fluctuates one way and then the other,
and when the match enters its last few minutes, all four results
are still possible?' After entertaining countless radio listeners
around the world for decades, who better to convey the breathless
drama of a Test match cliffhanger than Henry Blofeld? Now, in Ten
to Win . . . and the Last Man In, he has personally selected thirty
matches featuring unforgettable finishes and brought them vividly
to life again in his own inimitable way. Ranging from the
match-winning bowling of F.R. Spofforth against W.G. Grace's
England in 1882, via the first tied Test between Benaud's Australia
and Worrell's West Indies in 1960, to the never-say-die batting of
Ben Stokes in 2019, he picks out the key events and performances of
each memorable match and describes them as only he can. Alongside
the big-hitting heroics of Jessop in 1902 and Botham in 1981, he
revisits less celebrated matches such as South Africa's hard-fought
first Test win in 1906, as well as a crucial innings from Denis
Compton in 1948 and a match-saving performance by a young Alan
Knott in Guyana in 1968 - one of the most exciting matches he has
ever witnessed first-hand. Filled with colourful detail and
informed by insight gained from a lifetime immersed in the sport he
loves, Henry Blofeld's latest book will leave the reader in no
doubt - as he himself puts it - about 'what an absurdly
irresistible game cricket can be'.
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