Henry Blofeld

Henry Blofeld
Personal information
Full name Henry Calthorpe Blofeld
Born (1939-09-23) 23 September 1939 (age 73)
Hoveton Home Farm, Norfolk, England
Nickname Blowers, Tycoon, Typhoon
Batting style Right-handed
Role Wicket-keeper, commentator
Domestic team information
Years Team
1958–1959 Cambridge University
1956–1965 Norfolk
First-class debut 7 May 1958 Cambridge University v Kent
Last First-class 11 June 1960 Free Foresters v Cambridge University
Only {Template:Type2 1 May 1965 Norfolk v Hampshire
Career statistics
Competition First-class List A
Matches 17 1
Runs scored 758 60
Batting average 24.45 60.00
100s/50s 1/2 –/1
Top score 138 60
Balls bowled 18
Wickets
Bowling average
5 wickets in innings
10 wickets in match
Best bowling
Catches/stumpings 11/– –/–

Source: CricketArchive, 14 May 2008

Henry Calthorpe Blofeld, OBE (born at Hoveton Home Farm, Norfolk on 23 September 1939) (nicknamed Blowers by the late Brian Johnston) is a sports journalist. He is best known as a cricket commentator for Test Match Special on BBC Radio 4 and BBC Radio 5 Live Sports Extra where he has established a reputation as a commentator with an accent, vocabulary and syntax that was quintessentially Old Etonian both in style and substance. He also writes on cricket.

Early life

Blofeld's family were landowners in Norfolk and he was the youngest of three siblings. His older brother, Sir John Blofeld, became a High Court judge.[citation needed] Henry's father (Thomas Robert Calthorpe Blofeld, 1903–1986) was at Eton with Ian Fleming and his name is believed to have been the inspiration for the name of James Bond supervillain, Ernst Stavro Blofeld.[1] Blofeld's uncle was the former England Test team captain, the Honourable Freddie Calthorpe.[2]

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School Cricket

Henry was educated at Sunningdale School and Eton College and played cricket at both. He was wicket-keeper for Eton College first XI[3] and had an exceptional career as a schoolboy cricketer.[2] In 1956 Blofeld scored a century for a Public Schools team against the Combined Services,[4] and he was given the Cricket Society's award for the most promising young player of the season. Appointed Eton captain in his final year at school, Blofeld suffered a very serious accident, when he was hit by a bus while riding a bicycle,[3] remaining unconscious for 28 days.[5]

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First Class Cricket

Although his injuries curtailed his subsequent cricketing career,[3] he did go on to play 16 first-class matches for Cambridge University during 1958 and 1959.[2] The 1958 side was skippered by future England captain Ted Dexter and his first victim behind the stumps, on his debut for Cambridge against Kent, was also another future England captain, Colin Cowdrey, whom he caught off Dexter's bowling. He was unable to obtain a regular place in the side as a wicket keeper and only played in that position when first choice stumper Chris Howland was unavailable. Of the 16 games that he played for Cambridge (5 in 1958 and 11 in 1959), he only kept wicket in four of them. During 1959 he played in half of the University fixtures, including the Varsity Match against Oxford,[6] where he won his Blue "as an opening batsman of sorts... the worst Blue awarded since the war" according to Blofeld himself.[3] Fittingly he made his only first class century against the MCC at Lords in July 1959, in his penultimate game for Cambridge. He attended King's College, Cambridge but left after two years without receiving a degree.

In his only match for Free Foresters, against Cambridge University in 1960, he kept wicket and ironically his very last first class victim was his nemesis, the late Chris Howland, who was also Cambridge skipper that year. He also played just one Gillette Cup match for a minor county, Norfolk against Hampshire in 1965 under the captaincy of Bill Edrich, who was 49 years old at the time. Playing as an opening batsman, he top scored for his side with 60.[7]

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Sports journalism

Blofeld took a job at the merchant bank, Robert Benson Lonsdale,[8] but it was not to his taste and he drifted into sports journalism. He reported on the England tour to India in 1963/4 for The Guardian, and was close to being picked as an emergency batsman to replace the ill Micky Stewart for the 2nd Test in Bombay. When he was told by David Clark, the tour manager, that he may have to play, Blofeld replied "I would certainly play if needed, but if I scored 50 or upwards in either innings I was damned if I would stand down for the Calcutta Test".[3] On the day of the Test Stewart discharged himself from hospital and played despite his illness. After tea on the first day Stewart was rushed back to hospital and played no further part in the tour.[3] Blofeld continued as a print journalist until 1972 when he joined the Test Match Special team. He had also previously commentated for ITV in the 1960's.

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Test Match Special

He has been a regular commentator for TMS, except for a period at BSkyB from 1991 to 1994. Blofeld's cricket commentary is celebrated for his plummy voice and his idiosyncratic mention of superfluous details regarding the scene, including things like construction cranes or numbers of pink shirts in the crowd; as well as pigeons, buses, aeroplanes and helicopters that happen to be passing by.[9] After the tea and lunch breaks he is also known to talk for extended periods of time about the food on offer, in particular cakes, with occasional interruptions to describe the situation on the field. He also uses the phrase "my dear old thing".[citation needed]

Henry Blofeld is God.
A banner proclaiming Henry Blofeld is God. Headingley, Leeds, 8 August 1996.

Since 2006 he has commentated less frequently, missing the 2007 World Cup despite having covered the opening ceremonies of the two preceding World Cups in 2003 and 1999 for TMS. Speaking to Michael Parkinson about this on BBC Radio 2 on 26 August 2007, he responded to the question of why he was commentating less these days, by remarking that "they obviously want to bring in new faces" adding that during the Ashes series during 2006/7 "I felt in a funny way that I wasn't part of it any more". However, during the summer 2008 he resumed a full commentating quota on Tests and ODIs with undiminished enthusiasm. He missed the 2009 home test series against South Africa but returned for the 2010 home series against Pakistan. He did not cover the Ashes series in Australia during 2010–11 but returned for the Indian tour of England in Summer 2011. In January 2012, he rejoined the TMS team covering England's tour of the United Arab Emirates against Pakistan and also the autumn 2012 England tour of India.[citation needed]

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Outside sport

Blofeld was awarded an OBE for services to broadcasting in 2003. The following year he appeared alongside Fred Trueman in the "Tertiary Phase" of the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy radio series playing himself. Blofeld has written a partly autobiographical book entitled My Dear Old Thing: Talking Cricket. He undertakes an "Evening With Blowers" theatrical show which has toured all over the UK, as well as many other public speaking engagements.[citation needed]

In November 2003 he was the castaway on Desert Island Discs with his favourite selection being the classic Brian Johnston and Jonathan Agnew TMS exchange "Getting your leg over.[10]

Outside cricket, his favourite hobby is "drinking wine", followed by "eating food" and "going out." He even has his own Cote du Rhone label which he markets as Blowers Rhone that he unashamedly promotes during his one man theatrical chat shows 'An Evening With Blowers, that he mainly performs during the cricket close season.[citation needed]

He celebrated his 70th birthday by hosting an evening show in front of 2000 paying "guests" at the Royal Albert Hall, with appearances on stage by old friends like TMS commentator Jonathan Agnew, who narrated the event live, West Indian commentator Tony Cozier, TV personality Stephen Fry, cricket journalist John Woodcock, TV celebrity Christine Hamilton and his elder brother, former High Court Judge Sir John Blofeld.[citation needed]

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Personal life

Henry has been married and divorced twice. He has a daughter, Suki (born 1964), with his first wife. He separated from his Swedish second wife, Bitten, in 2007. He had a double heart bypass operation in 1999 after being diagnosed with angina and was given the last rites after he nearly died in intensive care following the operation. He currently lives in Chelsea.[citation needed]

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References

  1. ^ Ben Macintyre (5 April 2008). "Was Ian Fleming the real 007? (subscription required)[[Category:Pages containing links to subscription-only content]]". London: The Times. Retrieved 8 April 2008.  Wikilink embedded in URL title (help)
  2. ^ a b c "Henry Blofeld (Cricinfo profile)". ESPNCricinfo. Retrieved 30 December 2012. 
  3. ^ a b c d e f Williamson, Martin (15 December 2012). "Desperate times... send for Blowers". ESPNCricinfo. Retrieved 30 December 2012. 
  4. ^ Blofeld (2001), pp.37–39
  5. ^ http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/cricket/8652101/World-of-Henry-Blofeld-cricket-broadcaster.html
  6. ^ http://cricketarchive.com/Archive/Scorecards/23/23635.html
  7. ^ Wisden 1966, p. 644.
  8. ^ Blofeld (2001), p.50
  9. ^ Martin Williamson (17 May 2007). "Good morning and welcome". Cricinfo.com.  Retrieved on 1 November 2008.
  10. ^ http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/features/desert-island-discs/castaway/26b37783#p009375w
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Further reading

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External links

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Last modified on 23 April 2013, at 16:13