10 April 1999
Lancashire: Dream job for a man who loves the game
The Lancashire Evening Telegraph
Neil Bramwell meets former schoolmaster, radio presenter and
now county cricket secretary Dave Edmundson
A team of naughty schoolboy footballers cowered in their dressing
room.
Their pre-match trip to the pub had been rumbled, the game against a
Huddersfield amateur outfit had been lost and Sir was about to vent
his spleen.
But the subsequent dressing down turned out to be about as scary as
an episode of Buffy The Vampire Slayer.
The schoolmaster in question was Dave Edmundson, now one of the key
figures in Lancashire's cricket revolution.
And, 15 years on, he is still more comfortable dangling a carrot than
brandishing a stick.
Edmundson took on the dual roles of Lancashire County Cricket Club
cricket secretary and Lancashire Cricket Board secretary at an
unenviously turbulent time. The local leagues, particularly at this
end of the county, were in uproar over plans for a county-imposed
Premier League.
A few years down the line and progress has been sketchy, the future
remains cloudy.
But lessons have been learned and Edmundson clearly regrets some of
the early posturing.
"I feel I antagonised people because I have strident views about it
and they were directly opposed to others.
"I have taken a much lower profile in the Premier League. There is
more dialogue now. "We were not trying to impose a Premier League at
all costs. Certainly I have learned a great deal over the three years
and I think the leagues have as well," he said.
This public stance of conciliation is more in keeping with his
physical education teaching methods during 16 years at Blackburn's
Queen Elizabeth's Grammar School.
Edmundson was not as inspirational as some, yet was wholly
approachable -chummy enough with his charges to chuckle at playground
tags such as 'Jasper Carrott on Stilts' while retaining a necessary
level of respect.
But he always hoped that the grass was greener on some other side.
"I always aimed that I would get out of teaching when I was about 50
and aim for a freelance career in the media.
"I didn't want to be that ageing PE teacher who was still refereeing
a third year house match on Lammack in the freezing cold rain," he
said.
A somewhat drunken 'I can do that' conversation with Radio Lancashire
sports producer Dave Jones produced his biggest break.
His first assignment was a rugby union fixture between Orrell and
Exeter, when Edmundson did not even know which team was which, never
mind which radio van socket to use.
And although he also covered the local football sides, cricket was
his first love and he quickly created his own niche and introduced
the magazine Cricket Extra slot.
His Tales from the Tearoom became cult listening in cricket circles
and celebrities such as Gary Lineker, Michael Parkinson and Will
Carling were willing interviewees. In fact, there was only one
refusal, from a certain miserable Yorkshireman called Geoff Boycott.
Edmundson was an efficient operator and became a regular contributor
on the national BBC network.
So his name was familiar in and around Old Trafford when his
application for his current job landed on their mat.
For the cricket lover, it appears the dream job.
But, while his office overlooks the players when the rain is not
belting down, Edmundson can only occasionally lift his gaze from a
computer screen and catch a glimpse of the cricket.
So what does a cricket secretary do?
Edmundson works closely with coach Dav Whatmore, seconds coach Peter
Sleep and cricket development manager John Stanworth in a close-knit
Gang of Four at the engine room of the Old Trafford machinery.
He added: "In some ways I do have a managerial role with the players
off the field. Everything up to the boundary edge or the dressing
room door, I have a quite significant management influence.
"I am operating as a sort of Jim'll or Dave'll Fix It and encourage
the players that if they want to become a rocket scientist they have
enough time on their hands to do that.
"It's crucial that these players, who are the crown jewels of the
game, network and promote the game for future generations and that
again is very much part of my job." That is where the Premier League
issue overlaps and Edmundson's deep-seated roots in the region, and
its cricket folklore, probably make the conflict even more difficult
to stomach on a personal level.
His dad, a purchasing officer at Allspeeds, Clayton-le-Moors, played
for Great Harwood in the Ribblesdale League and did not have to drag
young Dave around the grounds from an early age.
He made his first team debut in 1966 at the age of 14 for the first
team at Rolls Royce - leg before for nought, for the record - under
the captaincy of Don Ormerod.
"I expected a bit of an arm round the shoulder and kid gloves
treatment.
"But it was 'Right, you're opening the batting, get out there' and I
didn't do very well.
"Don was a big influence on my early cricketing career and he brought
a Lancashire League application to the Ribblesdale League.
"During the late 60s and early 70s, the Ribblesdale League improved
its standards.
"You got people like Don and better pros came into the league like
Bob Leatherbarrow at Blackburn Northern and we had Keith Barker.
"There were overseas players like Roger Woolley at Great Harwood and
Graham Mansfield at Blackburn Northern," said Edmundson, who
captained Great Harwood from 1974-76 while teaching at the Derby
School in Bury.
"The sad thing is that, having written the History of the Lancashire
League and knowing exactly what's involved with it, as a spectator
sport it is not attracting players into their games. "I have kids of
21 and 18 who wouldn't dream of going to watch a Lancashire League
game.
"That profile of Lancashire League spectators is probably like
championship spectators here. It's a hanging on to old values.
"We need to address the grass roots problem and try to ensure that
youngsters who maybe will go to watch Lancashire League games will be
attracted to play the game.
"Premier League it might be but I am sure those senior leagues in
your area know full well that things are changing and have to be
improved because otherwise it will become a bit of a veterans type of
game.
"There has to be an improvement in standards and it's a case of
evolution not revolution."
Source :: Lancashire Evening Telegraph (https://www.reednews.co.uk/let/)