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Lloyd - The world according to Bumble: start the car

Here you can read online Lloyd - The world according to Bumble: start the car full text of the book (entire story) in english for free. Download pdf and epub, get meaning, cover and reviews about this ebook. City: London, year: 2010;2011, publisher: HarperCollins Publishers;HarperSport, genre: Detective and thriller. Description of the work, (preface) as well as reviews are available. Best literature library LitArk.com created for fans of good reading and offers a wide selection of genres:

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Lloyd The world according to Bumble: start the car
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    The world according to Bumble: start the car
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    2010;2011
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The world according to Bumble: start the car: summary, description and annotation

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Welcome to the weird and wonderful world of Bumble, the legendary SkySports cricket commentator whos one ball short of an over and delivers madcap moments galore in this ebullient, endearing and hilarious new book. David Bumble Lloyd is a legend in our living rooms, a genuine good bloke all cricket fans feel they know inside out because of his infectious, larger-than-life personality and that distinctive Lancashire burr. Bumble has become the one constant for passionate English fans in crickets rapidly changing landscape. He has earned cult status as a commentator and pundit, with viewers loving his unerring dedication to the games great fables. The World According to Bumble: Start the Car revels in the quirkier and humorous side of cricket, while offering behind-the-scenes action of Lloyds years spent following cricket around the globe, from Accrington to Lahore. Bumble waxes lyrical on everything from the genius of Shane Warne to the merits of a Lancashire hotpot ? and...

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To Diana Tags Susan Phil Steven Ben Spike Graham Sharon Joseph - photo 1

To Diana, Tags, Susan, Phil, Steven, Ben, Spike, Graham, Sharon, Joseph, Joshua, Freddie, Sarah, Enty, Sam, James and Jasmine. Hope you enjoy it!

Thanks for buying this book. The proceeds will go to a very good cause, namely the David Lloyd Retirement Fund, and, I assure you, will be redistributed to numerous outlets, in various personal pursuits across the globe. Oh, and rest easy in the knowledge that I will have fun doing so.

Of course, you might not have put your hand in your pocket to purchase this, so, for those of you who have received it as a gift on Fathers Day, on a birthday or at Christmas and want to pretend you have ploughed from cover to cover; for those of you who really like the thought of reading but never venture much further than the introduction; for those of you who normally do but find it to be the kind of book you just cant pick up after putting down; for those of you who thought you were investing in the life story of some bloke involved in top-level tennis; for those of you wanting to know no more than the secrets of my successful leisure club empire (youll be sadly disappointed); for those of you whose concentration spans waver after a tweet or two; for those of you who have picked this up in the smallest room during a break between courses at a friends dinner party here is the deal. Pretty much every essential detail you need to know about me is listed below. Welcome, however briefly, to my world.

My 50 Favourite Things

Career moment (playing): My 214 not out against India, Edgbaston, 1974

Career moment (broadcasting): Yuvraj Singhs six sixes in an over off Stuart Broad, World Twenty20, 2007

Opponent: Joel Garner. He would bowl me out with a bath sponge

Team-mate: Graham Lloyd

Modern player: Cant separate Virender Sehwag and Kevin Pietersen

Cricket ground: Sydney

Football team: Accrington Stanley

Footballer: Duncan Edwards

Holiday destination: St Ives, Cornwall

Tipple: A pint of Black Sheep or Timmy Ts

Meal: Chicken Madras with naan and lime pickle

Country: United Kingdom

Insect: Ladybirds are OK

Saying: Dont let the bastards grind you down

Animal: Dog

Pastime: Fishing

Personal item: Motorbike

Boyhood hero: Ken Barrington

Book: Tragically, I Was an Only Twin Peter Cook

Film: Brassed Off

Band: The Fall

Album: Imperial Wax Solvent The Fall

Motorway: M6 toll road

River: Wye

Hotel: Lygon Arms, Chipping Campden

Mode of transport: Bike

Season: Spring

Beatles or Stones? Stones

Colour: Black

Decade: 1960s

Restaurant: J Sheekey, Covent Garden, London

Pub: The Hesketh Tavern, Cheadle Hulme

Advice received: Be yourself my dad

Advice given: If you are a politician, dont knock on my door

Cake: Fruitcake

Flower: Rose

Number: 134

Condiment: Lancashire Sauce

Board game: Cluedo

Gadget: Chainsaw

Film star: Ray Winstone or Russell Crowe

TV soap: Emmerdale

Politician: Not one of them cheating, conniving, low-down dregs of the earth

Cricket tour: New Zealand

City: Manchester

Car: Audi

Memory: Loss of

Piece of trivia: Monacos army is smaller than its symphony orchestra

Comedian: Tommy Cooper

Joke: My granny started jogging in 1998 we have no idea where she is now.

IN THE BOX
THAT BLOKE OFF THE TELLY

Being on television inevitably means you get recognised by people when you are out and about. It is something you become accustomed to, and I have never really had a problem with it, although I did once get freaked out when a bloke came straight out with Youre David Lloyd, arent you? Because when I say I am recognised, I genuinely am only never as myself. I have had Rasputin (he had a massive beard, didnt he?), Tony Blair and Alan Titchmarsh over the years. Nice to know I have made such a good impression.

To be fair, at least it is normally another famous face from the world of cricket that I get. Although with my specs on I also encountered one of the more bizarre shouts. An Australian bloke walked up to me in a pub in Manchester and did a double take. Hey, I know you, you look like one of the Proclaimers, he said, his forehead crumpling in thought. What do you mean, one of the Proclaimers? I protested. I either look like both of them or none of them. Theyre bloody identical twins! Or they were the last time I looked.

It is not as though this identity crisis has hit me solely since I hooked up in the Sky commentary box, either. Now I come to think of it, it has followed me around since my playing days. When I signed for Cumberland in early 1985, I was asked to do a local radio interview over the telephone. We went through the usual rigmarole of how the move had come about, what offers had surfaced elsewhere, how I saw the sides chances that summer and what role I would fulfil within it.

It was a pleasant enough chat, and the interviewer wound down with a final question: Do you think you will adapt to the Cumbrian north-west weather again quickly after spending so much time in the Caribbean? The silly sod had got me mixed up with my brother Clive. I put him right, of course, and following a lengthy pause I heard his muffled voice relay the information to his producer: Hey, theyve only gone and signed the wrong one! I had some great times with Clive at Old Trafford, he has been a great pal, and he still lives down the road, but fancy getting a pasty bloke like him mixed up with a bronze Adonis like myself!

Nowhere are people more cricket daft than India, and appropriately it is there that I have experienced some of the daftest shouts. One chap in Rajkot was overjoyed when I agreed to pose with him for a picture at the airport. You are my most good commentator Sky Sport, he told me, through clenched teeth, as we grimaced for the first snap. After seven more shots, I made my excuses and left. Thank you, Mr Paul Arlott, he said. For being my friend.

Now they dont get a great deal of international cricket in Rajkot, I grant you, so the locals tend to get excitable when a game comes to town. After England were trounced there in the winter of 20089, I was asked for more photos at the ground. I was only too happy to oblige until the chap pointing the camera said: Excuse me, Mr Duncan Fletcher, look this way please. There must have been a particularly virulent strain of this eye infection going around, as later that evening came a knock at my hotel door. Three chaps were standing outside and greeted me with: You are our favourite umpire, Mr Hair. And you can imagine the levels of my paranoia when even the hotel staff weighed in. Upon checking out next morning, the receptionist said to me: Thank you for staying with us in Rajkot, Mr Bruce Yardley. I was glad to get out.

This was enough to put a chap permanently on edge. In Bangalore, one autograph hunter instructed me: Please sign this, Tony Greig. So I did exactly that to get my own back. OK, Greigy was a former England captain, but he is six foot four and speaks with an unmistakable South African accent. I undoubtedly preferred the next error, as I left the ground in Chennai during a pre-Christmas Test match. You are most famous English Mike Brearley, I was unequivocally told. I gave myself the once over, confirmed in my own mind I was not, but appreciated being thought of on the same intellectual level. If you are involved in mistaken identity its always better if it paints you in a decent light.

And you can also have some fun. Whenever we are in Leeds for a Test match, I make a dash for the Princess of Wales pub and sink a pint or three. A group of us were in there one year when a rather big Yorkshire lass, bedecked with tattoos from head to toe, sauntered up and barked: Youre the commentator, arent you? She was quite an intimidating sight supping a pint like a rugby front-rower between sentences so I meekly replied, Yes, I am.

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