The selection of Walter
Nicholls as Chairman of the Amateur Athletics Association caps a sixty year
career in the service of his sport. Manchester solicitor Nicholls follows in
the distinguished footsteps of fellow Jews Harold Abrahams and Arthur Gold in heading
up the world's oldest national athletics body.
Walter and his wife Marlene are
members of the Sha'arei Hayim congregation of Didsbury, South Manchester. The
couple have four children and nine grandchildren and are looking forward to
celebrating 55 years of marriage in June.
Now 81, Nicholls joined his first
athletics club, Manchester AC, at age 15, and has belonged to Trafford AC since
its foundation in 1964. During his senior career, he represented Lancashire and
Cheshire in the shot and his main event, the discus. He continued to compete
until his mid-seventies, earning medals in the Northern and National Veteran
Championships, and is hoping to resume training this year.
Nicholls began his career in
athletics administration in 1958, officiating and timekeeping at athletics
meetings. Nicholls lived in Israel for three years in the late 1960's, during
which time he coached athletics at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem and at
the Hapoel Club in Haifa. He officiated in the 1969 Maccabia Games, and 20
years later was invited back as Chief Timekeeper for the 1989 Games. In the
previous Maccabia in 1985, Nicholls had served as GB Athletics Team Manager.
Nicholls
has served roles in Northern, England and Great Britain team selection and
management throughout the last forty years. He has officiated at international
matches and the Commonwealth Games and still officiates at athletics meetings in
the North of England.
He was a
Director of the British Association for Sport and Law and Secretary of the
British Athletics Doping Committee for several years. He still chairs
disciplinary panels for UK Athletics. Specialising in sports law in his
professional life, he has acted in a number of high-profile doping cases.
Together with Mel Watman, Nicholls is a member of the selection panel for the
British Athletics Hall of Fame.
Nicholls
takes over the Chairmanship role after several years serving as Secretary of
the AAA. "Although UK Athletics has taken over from the AAA as the sport’s
governing body, we remain very active", Nicholls commented. "We
support events for young athletes across the country, such as the Marathon
Relay in which two hundred teams of 11-to-13-year-olds competed last year. We
see ourselves as the conscience of the sport and the custodians of its history,
and I hope I can further that through the setting up a national museum of
athletics."
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