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England players and officials - select an initial letter:
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Ivo Bligh

England

Player profile

Full name Ivo Francis Walter Bligh
Born March 13, 1859, Westminster, London
Died April 10, 1927, Puckle Hill House, Shorne, Kent (aged 68 years 28 days)
Major teams England, Cambridge University, Kent
Also known as became 8th Earl of Darnley in 1900
Batting style Right-hand bat
Height 6 ft 3 in
Education Eton; Cambridge University
Relations Great-uncle - JD Bligh, Father - Earl of Darnley, Uncle - EV Bligh, Uncle - H Bligh, Brother - Lord Clifton, Cousin - LE Bligh

Batting and fielding averages
Mat Inns NO Runs HS Ave 100 50 4s 6s Ct St
Tests 4 7 1 62 19 10.33 0 0 6 0 7 0
First-class 84 143 11 2733 113* 20.70 2 12 81 0

Bowling averages
Mat Inns Balls Runs Wkts BBI BBM Ave Econ SR 4w 5w 10
Tests 4 - - - - - - - - - - - -
First-class 84 - - - - - - - - - - - -

Career statistics
Test debut Australia v England at Melbourne, Dec 30, 1882 - Jan 2, 1883 scorecard
Last Test Australia v England at Sydney, Feb 17-21, 1883 scorecard
Test statistics
First-class span 1877 - 1883

 Profile

Ivo Bligh, who in 1900 became the 8th Earl of Darnley, was an extremely talented sportsman who won Blues at racquets and tennis as well as cricket. An excellent fielder and attacking batsman, his first-class career was short as he suffered from poor health from an early age. By the time he stopped playing he had represented the Gentleman and led the 1882-83 tour to Australia where the Ashes were regained, and where he was presented with the urn which is till played for to this day. On his death in 1927 his widow presented the urn to the MCC.
Cricinfo staff

Wisden obituary
The 8th Earl of Darnley, born in Bruton Street, London, on March 13, 1859, died peacefully in his sleep of heart failure at Puckle Hill, Cobham, Kent, on April 10, aged 68. It was in October, 1900, that he had succeeded to the Earldom. As a small boy he received some coaching from Farmer Bennett, and at Cheam, where he had some of the Studds among his companions, his bowling gained him a place in the Eleven. Naturally, he developed his cricket considerably whilst at Eton, and in his four matches against Harrow and Winchester--in 1876 and 1877--made 106 runs with an average of 26.50, his highest innings being 73 against the latter side in 1876. Eton won three of the four games with an innings to spare: the other, against Harrow in 1877, was drawn with the position fairly open. A feature of Mr. Bligh's batting was his driving--he was 6ft. 3ins. In height--and, until ill-health handicapped him, he was a capital long-field and point. At Cambridge he gained his Blue as a Freshman, being the last choice, and so was a member of the famous team of 1878, which played eight matches and won them all--that against the Australians, at Lord's by an innings and 72 runs. In his four games with Oxford he was on the winning side three times, Cambridge (when he was captain) losing by 135 runs. His scores in those matches were 14 and 24 not out, 1,59 and 13,37 and 6--an aggregate of 154 with an average of 25.66. In his University's match with Surrey at the Oval in 1879 he carried out his bat for 113, and in Kent's game against the same county on the same ground a year later (when he probably reached his full powers) he made 105. His association with the Kent eleven, owing to ill-health, extended only from 1877 to 1883, during which period he played in 47 matches, scoring 1,490 runs with an average of 18.86 and occasionally, during the absence of Lord Harris, leading the side. There can be little doubt that, had he remained in full vigour, he would have developed into a really great batsman, for he was only twenty-one when his breakdown occurred. In 1879 and 1880 he had represented the Gentlemen against the Players three times, and, although he played no large innings in the matches, he showed consistent cricket in making 55 runs for three times out. The most interesting episode of his short career was his visit to Australia in 1882-3 as captain of a team in an endeavour to regain for England the laurels lost in the historic Test at the Oval the previous summer. The Australians, under W. L. Murdoch's captaincy, had then, it will be remembered, won, after a thrilling finish, by seven runs--a result which led to the term The Ashes being coined. The said Ashes were supposed to have been taken to Australia, and hopes ran high that Mr. Bligh's team would recover them. As it happened, Mr. Bligh was successful in his quest, for, meeting Murdoch's men in three matches the Englishmen, after losing the first by nine wickets, won the second by an innings and 27 runs and the third by 69 runs. It is true that in a fourth game later in the tour, Australia--not solely Murdoch's men--were successful by four wickets: still, the rubber having been gained against the side which had defeated us at the Oval, honours were considered to have been won by the Englishmen. Mr. Bligh's interest in cricket remained as great as ever after he had dropped out of first-class matches, and he was President of the M.C.C. in 1900 and of the Kent County C.C. in 1892 and 1902. Apart from cricket, he had whilst at Eton distinguished himself greatly at rackets, having been champion in the singles in 1876 and one of the champions in the doubles in both that year and the next; while he represented Cambridge at tennis in the singles in 1879 and 1880, and in the doubles in 1878 and two following years. Later on he played a fair amount of golf, but his great love was always cricket--the game with which his family had been associated for nearly 150 years. Lord Darnley was one of the most genial and kind-hearted of men. Only a short time before he passed away he penned some interesting reminiscences of Mr. F. R. Spofforth for publication in Wisden
Wisden Cricketers' Almanack

 Notes
Became 8th Earl of Darnley in 1900

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Nov 20, 1900

Ivo Bligh
Ivo Bligh
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