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Inducted into the hall of Fame 2003 |
Frederick Meredith has had a lifelong involvement
in ice hockey, and for the most part British Ice hockey. However despite
being a fine exponent of the playing skill, it is for his role as an
administrator – a role in which he remains active with the
International Ice Hockey Federation - that he has been inducted to the
British Ice Hockey Hall of Fame.
Born in 1937 in Montreal of a British father and a Canadian mother,
Meredith learnt to skate at an early age. His position as netminder, to
which he converted whilst at Bishops College, resulted from having
played both ice hockey, and cricket as a wicket keeper, during his early
school days.
A move to England at the age of 18 and entry to Trinity College,
Cambridge, saw him immediately welcomed into the Light Blues team, then
perennial losers to their Oxford rivals. However the “perennial
losers” were about to encounter a change of fortunes. Meredith’s
playing debut was a 1-11 defeat but progress the following year reduced
the gap to a 2-5 margin and by his third year, the efforts of the
Cambridge team were rewarded with a 6-1 victory. Meredith duly graduated
with degrees in law and economics, but also enjoyed success behind the
hockey bench. Taking up the coaching reign in 1958 (the year of the 6-1
victory), he coached the Varsity to more success as between ‘58 and
’62 they lost just once.
British Ice Hockey Association (BIHA) rules at the time determined that
both the Oxbridge captains had an automatic place on the council of the
national governing body, and Frederick became Cambridge's
representative. His ability must have impressed the long established
members as, in 1960 he was elected as a 'personal' member - effectively
a directorship – and two years later he travelled to the USA with the
British World championship squad as the BIHA rep.
Having served the BIHA as secretary 1971-73, his career as a management
consultant with IBM curtailed his activities at precisely the time of
grass roots revival of ice hockey in Britain. However he retained his
place on the BIHA and upon the retirement of the controversial
J.F.'Bunny' Ahearne in 1982, Meredith took over as president.
It was whilst in this position that Meredith had his greatest impact
domestically. His major achievement in a 17 year reign as president of
the now defunct BIHA, was the gaining of three major blue-chip sponsors
and a BBC TV contract, placing Meredith as an influential, overseeing
President of a time that the benefit of hindsight can identify as a
“golden era” within the domestic game. Indeed it was a time of
growth and of growing profile, raising both credibility as well as
public and media awareness of the sport, to levels not seen before or
since. The British senior team also returned to the world stage and
raced from it’s Pool D return in 1988 to the heady heights of Pool A
in 1993 before stabilizing in Pool B, a position it retains to this day.
In April 1983, Heineken experimentally sponsored the first, and
successful, end of season British Championship weekend at the Streatham
rink in south London; through their parent company's promotional agency
The Wight Company, Heineken dramatically expanded their involvement,
from the next autumn. Sponsoring the entire British League, culminating
in the first British Championship at the 8,000 seat Wembley Arena, with
average attendance's over the previous winter increased by 37.5%.
This brought nation wide BBC TV coverage of several matches per season
during the following years, which augmented by live transmission of the
finals on Grandstand, greatly increased the profile of the sport, as did
the PR input, the 'dressing' of the rinks for TV and modest annual
financial contributions to the clubs.
This arrangement continued until the spring of 1993, with Meredith
saying "...the dramatic growth of the sport in this country would
not have been possible without Heineken's backing".
Norwich Union took up sponsorship of the traditional season opening
Autumn Cup from 1985 for six years, to be followed after a 12 month gap
by Benson & Hedges. The input of B&H being considered by some to
be the most beneficial that the sport has experienced, their hands-on
presence being evident in every game, and continuing beyond the 1999
collapse of the BIHA.
In 1987 Meredith became a member of the British Olympic Committee, with
election to the executive board in 1991 and membership of several
working parties. The year after first joining the BOC he moved into the
upper echelons of the IIHF, being elected to the Rules Committee. In
1994 he became a Council member of the world governing body for ice
hockey, with a seat on several committees.
With his 1999 resignation from, and the demise of the BIHA, Frederick
has spent his energies at international level as chairman of the IIHF
Legal and Statutes & Bylaws committees. As part of this remit he
regularly travels the world to head various levels of the World
Championships and European tournaments.
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Researched and compiled by
Martin C. Harris - January 2003 |
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