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Ed has been
active as a coach, umpire and administrator in Saskatoon baseball since
1983.
He helped
establish a rookie league concept for boys under eight years of age,
promoting it with both the Saskatchewan and Canadian associations. He
has twice travelled with Saskatoon Kenko teams to international
tournaments in Japan.
Ed was born
in Prince Albert in 1945 and grew up in Shellbrook and began playing
baseball at the age of eight. He played on the Shellbrook Little League
team in 1957 and played in all age categories until he left the
community in 1963 to pursue studies at the University of Saskatchewan.
He began
coaching in Saskatoon in 1983, starting with the Giants, who played in
the Mosquito division. He was coach of the Saskatoon Cardinals, a
connection he would maintain for many years, and was also president of
the Saskatoon Beaver League, which introduced a new citywide zoning
concept.
In 1987, and
again in 1988, Ed wore Canada’s uniform when a Saskatoon team
participated in a world championship Kenko tournament in Japan. Ed
developed the idea of a Rookie League in Saskatoon, using the Kenko
baseball and a pitching machine, stressing the safety factor of the
game. The idea then gained momentum with both the Saskatchewan Baseball
Association and Baseball Canada.
Ed did double
duty on the first Japanese tour, serving as assistant coach for Canada
and also umpiring, for which he won an award as best official in the
tournament.
Ed became a director of the Saskatchewan
Baseball Association in 1986, was president in 1997 and spent two years
as past president, with all roles leading to a 1998 Special Award of
Merit.
He received a
life membership award in 2000, in part, recognizing that Saskatchewan
was named The Province of the Year by Baseball Canada five times during
his tenure of service. He was voted into the Saskatchewan Baseball Hall
of Fame in August 2000, and, among other contributions, was cited for
his work with Dave Shury, John Dewar and Paul Hack, in producing Wheat
Province Diamonds, the history of Saskatchewan baseball. He shared the
Hall of Fame moment with Lieutenant-Governor Lynda Haverstock, one of
the guests at the ceremonies. |