FORMER Oldham RLFC committee member and local cricket stalwart Eddie Bayliss has died peacefully after a short illness, aged 83, at a nursing home in Chadderton.

It is not thought to be related in any way to Covid-19.

Roughyeds have sent their sincere condolences, headed by chairman Chris Hamilton and including staff, players and supporters, to Eddie's family at this sad time.

Also a well-known and highly-respected figure in local cricket circles, Eddie was on the committee at Watersheddings for three years in the days when Oldham RLFC was still a members' club.

Not all simultaneously, his committee colleagues during those three years included the likes of Nigel Tench, Bob Ogden, Paul Lovett, Keith Broadbent, Malcolm Greenway, Keith Potter, Jack Bowden and Fred Howarth.

Harvey Ashworth was club chairman and Dr Donald Walton was club doctor.

Eddie continued to have a close connection with the club for some years after the governing committee was succeeded by the club's first board of directors on becoming a limited company.

He had always had a keen interest in cricket and after watching his son Lee playing in the Saddleworth and District League he became an umpire in that league and he wore the white coat for more than 20 years until he stepped down in 2017.

It was during his early years of standing in the middle that he became chairman of the Saddleworth League in 2002 when he succeeded Ian Schofield.

Little did he know then that in subsequent years he would be heavily involved with the reorganisation of local league cricket which initially saw the merger of the Saddleworth and District League with the Central Lancashire League.

They came together as the Pennine League, but that league soon folded with clubs going their separate ways, many of them into the new Greater Manchester League.

For several years Eddie had a regular slot on Oldham Community Radio in his capacity as Saddleworth League chairman – an initiative which made him well known to listeners and to station personnel David McGealy, Gerald Brierley and Gilbert Symes, himself something of a local radio legend in Saddleworth.

"He was a very popular and well-known figure in local sporting circles and he will be missed by everyone who knew him," said his son Lee.

Eddie leaves his wife Carol, two sons in Brett and Lee, a step-daughter Deborah, grandchildren Connor, James, Thomas, Georgia and Jacob and a great grandchild, Rose.

His funeral is this Thursday, April 16 at 1.30pm at Oldham Crematorium.

Attendance is however restricted to 10 family members because of social-distancing but the family will be having a church service and a wake to celebrate Eddie's life at a later date when the coronavirus pandemic restrictions have been lifted.

In the meantime cards and/or messages of sympathy and condolences can be sent to Mrs C Bayliss at 33 Old Mill House, Old Mill House Lane, Springhead, Oldham OL4 5TS.