Greenkeeper shares 40 years of memories

Greenkeeper shares 40 years of memories: A dedicated greenkeeper thought to be one of the longest serving in the industry is celebrating spending 40 years at the same golf club.

Terry Wharton joined Haydock Park Golf Club in April 1980 as a young man and is now head greenkeeper.

Greenkeeper shares 40 years of memories

Greenkeeper shares 40 years of memories

He said: “The 40 years have gone quickly and I’ve been very fortunate to spend most of my working life in a beautiful landscape, working with good greenkeepers and staff trying to raise the standards and the playability of our course.”

There have been plenty of changes since he first took up his role at the club.

“The early years saw limited machinery on the course, with most surfaces cut with hand machines, except for fairways and rough that were cut with tractor and gang mowers,” he said.

“The top-dressing facility of a self-contained hopper supersedes the tractor, trailer and wheelbarrow that in the early 1980s you’d be lucky to dress greens with 20 tonnes throughout the year, against 120 tonnes delivered in a two-month period in the spring at the present time.”

With the advancements in technology and more televised golf events, Terry has seen many changes during his career.

He said: “The golfers’ desire for better surfaces has seen the staffing levels raised at most clubs compared to the early years, with busy clubs realising the work programme for the day needs to be completed quickly and efficiently before the golfers start their round, with only the basic tasks being completed early afternoon. This point can be shown with our start times in the summer of 1980 – we had an 8am start with a 5pm finish against present start time 6am with a 2pm finish, allowing the greens team to complete most of the course set-up before the course gets busy.”

Terry said his favourite part of the club was its members, remembering one in particular.

He said: “We’ve had some real characters playing the game at Haydock Park, none more so than Jack Padoue, who was one of the ‘old guard’.

“On arrival at the club one Monday dinner, Jack was met with builders in the men’s locker room.

“Jack looked surprised, ‘how dare they work’ on the day he played, and it may affect his preparation on setting up for his four ball. Jack’s four ball was run to military precision and woe betide anyone getting in Jack’s way!

“So the builders were told by Jack what was expected from them – he wanted a ‘quick clean efficient job and by the way turn that radio off, don’t you realise you’re working at a private members’ golf club?’

“The builders came across Jack a few more times before they finished the work and were met with the same abruptness.

“On the builders completing the locker room Jack realised his key wouldn’t open his locker. On further inspection someone had accidentally spilled some super glue into the lock, we wondered who….”

Stephen Nicholson, the club’s business manager, paid tribute to Terry’s loyal service.

He said: “Wow, 40 years – that’s longer than I’ve been on this planet. It’s a feat that’s rarely matched these days, with more and more people opting to move from position to position to progress their careers. Terry’s loyalty has been at the heart of his longevity here.

“Alongside this what I am impressed with the most about Terry is his enthusiasm to continue to learn and develop.

“We’ve sent him down to Oxford to see how a different style of greenkeeping works, we’ve updated our systems so he now has a computer in his office, has access to Word, Excel and email whilst updating everything in the cloud along with an online planner in the form of Turfkeeper that tracks all shifts, financial planning of stock, seed, fertiliser applied etc.

“It’s great that Terry continues to push for more and we look forward to continuing to work together for the next 40 years! You are a credit to the club, your profession and your family. Once this crisis is over we will no doubt have a proper celebration for Terry – in the meantime, thanks again for all that you do and keep up the great work.”

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English groundsmen braced for uncertainty

English groundsmen braced for uncertainty: While most counties have furloughed staff and players in a bid to save money as they wait to see what, if any, cricket will be played this summer, a hardy bunch of groundsmen remain in situ, trying their best to keep on top of the country’s 18 first-class grounds.

Without pitches to prepare though, their job is very different to what it would normally be at this time of year. “I know everyone thinks we are just grass cutters but that’s pretty much what we are at the moment,” jokes Stu Kerrison, Essex’s head groundsman.

English groundsmen braced for uncertainty

English groundsmen braced for uncertainty

He has been with Essex since 1984 and is the only one of the club’s ground staff to have been kept on full-time with the rest placed on furlough. It is a situation which has been mirrored across ground staffs up and down the country. But even though there is no cricket, there is still plenty to be done and the remaining groundsmen have had to pick up the slack. Understandably, they have had to prioritise the most crucial tasks.

For Kerrison, that means the odd jobs around the ground, like trimming the hedges, are being left for now so he can focus on the square and outfield. Gary Barwell, the head groundsman at Edgbaston, has only been cutting the outfield one way rather than the two ways he would usually do, which gives it that polished finish you see on the TV. “You are just coping with it,” Barwell tells Cricbuzz. “You knock a few things off that aren’t important.”

One of the biggest focus areas has been keeping enough water on the grounds in the unseasonably warm weather. Barwell has computer irrigation at Edgbaston so he can turn it on from home but the watering at Chelmsford is done via a good old fashioned tap and sprinkler system. “That’s been a battle because it takes three and a half days to water the outfield with our sprinkler,” says Kerrison.

The other major challenge has been perhaps the only certainty facing the groundsmen at present: the grass will not stop growing. And given the warm weather throughout April, followed by a bout of rain this week, it is growing fast. Barwell took 28 boxes of grass off the Edgbaston outfield on Friday. “Every day the outfield at the main ground needs to be cut whenever you’re there,” he says. Kerrison has sprayed the Chelmsford outfield with a growth regulator to slow things down.

For Neil Godrich, Derbyshire’s head groundsman, the enforced break has been an opportunity to recover the square from the winter’s rainfall. “We had quite a lot of bare ends on the main square because the rain washed all the seed around in October and November time,” he tells Cricbuzz. “If you had looked at my square in March, you’d think it looked like a BMX track as one of my staff said. Now the grass is getting stronger, we’ve done all the pre-season rolling so it’s helped a lot.”

All three groundsmen agree that in an ideal world they would want between two and three weeks to prepare their pitches for the start of the season but there is an acceptance that they will have to conform to the timelines laid down by the ECB. That means they could be forced to produce pitches in far shorter timeframes. “I’ve got a pitch out in six or seven days before,” Godrich says. “I wouldn’t recommend it, though. You need about 12 days for both sets of formats.”

If the season does eventually get underway, the ECB want to pack as much cricket in as possible to make up for lost time. That could mean lots of matches in quick succession, a challenge for the groundsmen. “If you told me we’ve got five different games in five days hopefully I’ve got the skillset and people would have the understanding,” says Barwell. “We’ll just cope with what we’re given. I believe the groundstaff up and down the country are good enough to do that.”

“If you can get a week between any Championship matches that are scheduled, we should be alright with that,” Kerrison says. “The one-day stuff, you can play three or four of those on the spin. Our pitches are designed to go four or five days so we can play a number of games on them in that period of time.”

There would, however, need to be some understanding from the players, umpires and pitch inspectors. In a situation where matches are crammed in even more than usual, not every pitch is going to be a belter, delivering the perfect balance between bat and ball. Some matches will no doubt have to be played on used pitches. That won’t be anyone’s fault.

The possibility that there will be no domestic cricket this season is a real one, of course. The need to create bio-secure grounds would seem to be a more likely prospect for a bi-lateral series between England and another country than getting county cricket up and running. The logistical challenge of rolling out bio-secure measures to 18 different first-class grounds is extremely complex. As such, for the likes of Godrich and Kerrison, groundsmen at non-Test match grounds, they may not get to cut a pitch in 2020.

If that is the case, the financial issues already impacting the game in England and Wales will get worse. The concern is what that would mean for county staffs. “The biggest fear for groundsmen around the counties at the moment is losing their staff,” says Kerrison. “They will look to cut money and one of the first places they look is out on the ground. They think they can save a few quid here and there. We are all concerned about keeping our staff.”

“My team are very important to me,” says Barwell. “I’ve got a great team with me at Edgbaston. They’re all desperate to come in to do some work. They’re the concerns you have more than the grass itself.” It’s one of the reasons why all three groundsmen say they will do whatever it takes to get their pitches produced in time. “We need to get cricket up and running from a financial point of view if we can, to protect people’s jobs,” Godrich adds.

For now, all the likes of Kerrison, Barwell and Godrich can do is try to keep on top of their grounds and wait things out. While they do that, they are putting in some long days. “Look I’m not an NHS worker so you’re not going to complain too much,” Barwell says. “I work in a cricket ground on my own. It is difficult though. You come home and you’re absolutely on your knees because it’s been a hard day.”

“It is quite lonely and there’s lots to do,” Godrich says. “As soon as you’re off one machine, you’re onto another one. I bring my dog down here. He loves it and has a run round. It’s quite lonely now, though. When it first started, you thought it was alright. Now it’s like, I’ve got that to do, I’ve got this to do. Is it going to rain?”

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