Sport In Profile UK Issue 15 | Page 31

East Grinstead scoring facilities and helped set up the Outreach Committee to encourage local participation from the community and increase our profile and of course membership. SIP: What are the most challenging and rewarding aspects of your role? GB: The most challenging aspects are ensuring the financial aspects of the club are met year on year. We are part of a large sports complex that gives the visitor a false idea of our financial muscle, as apart from minimal ground support, we have to be totally self-financing and critically without the benefit of revenue from our own bar! Seeing the club expand over my 28 years from three senior and two junior teams to a seventeen team club, five senior sides on a Saturday in the Sussex Leagues, two sides in the Surrey Trust league on a Sunday a Woman’s and Girls sides in the Sussex Leagues plus junior teams from U9 to U16 has been very rewarding. Having put a lot of effort into the pitches over the years and especially last winter when we completely re-laid both of our squares so we are now have the satisfaction receiving regular high marks for the facility. SIP: What are your plans for the rest of 2017? GB: To ensure all the sides are stable whilst giving the opportunity for top performers in a particular team to be promoted higher to experience the requirements at that level. We would not wish to promote a player to a lever he/she is not comfortable at, hence our emphasis on coaching and youth development. Every player no matter what age should have the opportunity at East Grinstead Cricket Club of being the best they can be. SIP: How important is youth development to the club? GB: This is a key priority in the club, because of the number of teams we run it is imperative there is a conveyor belt of new young players coming through to challenge at all levels. The club provides regular planned age related coaching sessions all supervised by ECB qualified coaches. Young players are introduced to senior cricket in the 5th team which is nominally a lads and dads side playing in a conference league against similar teams from other local clubs that we find to be an ideal introduction to senior cricket. SIP: How’s the general mood down at the club at the moment? GB: Generally very good but not without the usual crisis when everyone seems to take their holidays at the same time, however we have not defaulted on a fixture so far this season, but are eagerly awaiting for the Universities to release some more of our players. It is important that the management of the club is as efficient and organised as possible during a busy season so all the ground work has to be completed out of season to leave the players to worry about standard of performance during the matches to enable them to fully participate and enjoy the great game of Cricket. SIP: How would you say the season has gone for the club so far? GB: Very well, the first XI are challenging for the championship which at this stage of the season could go to any one of four clubs who are within 9 points of one another. The remainder of the teams are comfortable positioned in their respective leagues and with a burst could well challenge for a promotion position in the second half of the season. SIP: Would you consider yours to be a community club? GB: Very much so. We have a strap line on our newsletter that states ‘Cricket in the Community’, anyone with an interest in cricket can come along to a taster session to see if they enjoy it, some fall away others go on to represent the club for many years. The local secondary school uses the ground for their inter school matches. There is a cricket fun day run by the town sports development officer when every junior school in the area enjoys a day of soft ball cricket. The Sussex County 2nd XI, the Sussex Women’s XI plus the district Academy XI have fixtures at the ground giving the local community the opportunity to see high-class cricket in the town. We recently hosted two T20 matches between Sussex and Kent Second XIs. www.sportip.biz 31