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Tufnell and also
Despite barely knowing each other, they conspire to pose as a young professional couple in order to meet the requisites of an advertisement for a relatively cheap flat in the distinctive building at 23 Meteor Street, Tufnell Park, which is owned by and also houses the landlady, Marsha Klein ( Julia Deakin ).
Tufnell also received an honorary doctorate from Middlesex University on 20 July 2011 in recognition of his achievements in sport and the media.
He also hosted the Phil Tufnell Cricket show on BBC radio 5 during the 2010 season, although this ended before the conclusion of the season.
Tufnell is also a big fan of the football club Arsenal.
He also appeared four times in the 1996 World Cup, but thereafter the selectors ' preference turned decisively to Tufnell, and Illingworth never played international cricket again.

Tufnell and book
* Writer Clive James spent a large part of his early life in Britain living in Tufnell Park, and describes in detail his disdain for it in his book Falling Towards England.

Tufnell and Phil
* April 29 – Phil Tufnell, British cricketer
He has made one-off appearances, including on Red Nose Day's The Ultimate Makeover, where Hancock, Anna Ryder Richardson, Phil Tufnell and TV gardener Joe Swift transformed a Liverpool play centre for children whose parents could not afford child-care.
* Video of Phil Tufnell explaining his support for charity The Children's Trust, Tadworth
* Episode 14 – Phil Tufnell
* Phil Tufnell (" Tuffers ") ( 2003 –)
* Phil Tufnell ( born 1966 ), British television personality and former test cricketer for England
In 2004, Matt Dawson joined the BBC TV quiz show A Question of Sport, featuring as a regular team captain opposite Ally McCoist and more recently, Phil Tufnell.
He played the first five tests of the 1997 Ashes series but was dropped for the final test, replaced by Phil Tufnell, after averaging 54 with the ball and showing a weakness to short-pitched fast bowling as a batsman.
* Sport stars featuring Matt Dawson, Phil Tufnell, Sally Gunnell, Tessa Sanderson and Dame Tanni Grey-Thompson.
and tried to teach cricketer Phil Tufnell about art in ITV's Don't Call Me Stupid.
On 17 March 2008, he competed with Sharron Davies and team captain Phil Tufnell in the 37th season of A Question of Sport, and made history by achieving the first ever perfect score on the show since it started in 1970.
He was dropped for The Oval, and replaced by Phil Tufnell.
She won a Celebrity episode of the Weakest Link, beating cricketer Phil Tufnell in the final.
The pitch at Old Trafford traditionally favours spin bowling, and England picked two spin bowlers: Phil Tufnell and debutant Peter Such.

Tufnell and Tufnell's
With 121 Test wickets, Tufnell is as of 2009 35th in the list of most wickets by an England bowler, and his average of 37. 68 is considered high for a genuine bowler, however Tufnell's personality, trademark behaviour and " great control of flight " when playing made him a popular sports personality.

Tufnell and Cricket
Tufnell is the president of a cricket charity – Cricket for Change.
Born in 1887 in Simla, Punjab, India, Tufnell played first-class cricket for Cambridge University and the Marylebone Cricket Club in a not particularly notable first-class career that lasted from 1907 to 1924.

Tufnell and with
The estate then passed to Henry Archibald Tufnell ( d 1898 ) who died with no children, and then to Lt Col Edward Tufnell ( d 1909 ) HM Inspector of Schools, Factory Commissioner, Director Greenwich Hospital m. 1846 Honoria Mary Macadam ( daughter of Col. Macadam Knight of Hanover, d. 1877 )
Serious building began in the 1845 with a scheme sponsored by Henry Tufnell and designed by John Shaw Jr, who had laid out the Eton Estate in Chalk Farm.
Whereas roads and railway lines were sliced through Kentish Town and Camden in the 19th century, they mostly passed through Tufnell Park in tunnel, and Junction Road railway station provided a direct link with central London.
In 1840, he founded with E. Carleton Tufnell, the Battersea Normal College for the training of teachers of pauper children.
Following his retirement in 2002, Tufnell has built on his popularity with several television appearances.
Tufnell was occasionally inspired with the ball, taking 11-93 against Australia at the Oval in 1997 ( for which he won the Man of the Match award after England won by 19 runs ) and seven wickets in an innings against the West Indies at the Oval in 1991, but he took his 121 Test wickets with a bowling average of 37. 68 across his whole Test career.
During his career spanning over a decade with Middlesex, Tufnell took more than 1, 000 first class wickets in the English game.
Tufnell Park tube station is a London Underground station in Islington close to its boundary with Camden ( see Tufnell Park ).
After playing a bad-tempered fifty-minute set at Tufnell Park Dome in north London on May 14, 1993, where the band were co-headlining with Eat, Terry Bickers surprised the audience and the rest of the band by announcing his intentions to leave.
Cornwell grew up in Tufnell Park and Kentish Town and attended William Ellis School in Highgate, where he played bass in a band with Richard Thompson, later a member of Fairport Convention.

Tufnell and cricket
Tufnell retired from professional cricket before the 2003 season in order to participate in the " reality television " show I'm a Celebrity ... Get Me Out of Here!

Tufnell and journalist
William Tufnell Le Queux ( 2 July 1864-13 October 1927 ) was an Anglo-French journalist and writer.

Tufnell and .
Previously living together in Peterston-Super-Ely, a village near the western outskirts of Cardiff, in 2008 they moved to Tufnell Park, London, to be closer to their daughter and grandchildren.
* St. Mary Brookfield, Dartmouth Park Road, Tufnell Park, London NW5, 1869 – 75
In the late 1930s, the Odeon cinema on the junction of Tufnell Park Road and Holloway Road was built as a Gaumont but was severely damaged by a doodlebug during the Second World War.
Tufnell Park is an area of north London, England which straddles the border of the London Borough of Islington and the London Borough of Camden.
Tufnell Park Road runs along the line of an old Roman road which stretches from the Roman camp beneath Barclays Bank and Batten's Carpets on the Holloway Road, up Dartmouth Hill and over Hampstead Heath.
In 1753 the area became the property of William Tufnell who was granted the manor of Barnsbury by his father-in-law Sir William Halton.
The manor's gateposts can still be seen, however, towards the west end of Tufnell Park Road.
Tufnell petitioned parliament for permission to develop his estate but the leases he was granted were left unused.
William's father was Samuel Tufnell of Langleys in Essex.
These estates went to his older brother John Jolliffe Tufnell of Langleys.
The Tufnell Park estate passed to his brother George Foster Tufnell, MP for Beverley ( d 1798 ), then to George's son William Tufnell ( d 1809 ), MP for Colchester, who married in 1804 into a fortune owned by Mary Carleton ( daughter of Thomas Carleton of South Carleton d. 1829 ).
William was the brother of Lt .- Col. John Charles Tufnell of Bath ( leased Lackham House, Laycock in Wiltshire in 1877 ), banker, m. 1796 Uliana Ivanova Margaret Fowell ( d. 29 / 1 / 1848 ) daughter of John Fowell of Bishopbourne ).
The manor then passed to Henry Tufnell ( d 1854 ), MP for Ipswich and Devonport, Liberal chief whip, Lord of the Treasury, m. Anne Augusta Wilmot-Horton ( daughter of the Governor of Ceylon d. 17 / 9 / 1843 ), m. 2 1844 Frances Byng ( daughter of Sir John Byng Earl of Staffford, d. 1846 ), m. 3.

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