Cone,
Lance – Year of induction: 2006
Lance Cone is one of the most influential
people in the history of Britball. As Head Coach of the London Ravens
from 1984 to 1986 he presided over a team that never lost a game. He
then went onto become the BAFA Chairman in 1987 at a time when the
sport was booming, and retired from Britball in the mid-90s.
Interview conducted March 2004
What was your background in the game before
getting involved in britball?
I played for High School and then for the Army. In the 1970s I moved to
England, and in 1984 I joined the London Ravens.
How did you become the London
Ravens Head Coach?
I was having a drink in a London pub, when someone heard my accent. He
said to come along to Hyde Park where this team [the Ravens] trained,
and soon afterwards I was asked to coach them.
How did you recruit players?
Radio, TV, newspapers, if anyone knew any big men from the local gyms.
We were quite high profile due to our training sessions at Hyde Park,
and we gained a lot of people from that.
What do you consider to be
the best Ravens side?
Each year I was there they were getting better and better, so it would
have to be the 1986 squad.

Cone - the coach
In your view why did some
clubs not join the Budweiser League in 1986, and why did the Ravens
join it?
I helped to get Budweiser involved as I wanted them to sponsor the
Ravens, but they said no as they wanted to sponsor the league. I
addressed the AFL clubs, but some like the Birmingham Bulls and the
Leicester Panthers, did not want American beer sponsors as they wanted
a number of British sponsors. I tried to argue that one major sponsor
will do more than a number of smaller ones, so some clubs broke away. After failing to find sponsorship, all the
clubs came back and the
League was unified
Do you think the Ravens would
have been European champions if able to compete in the first Eurobowl
competition in 1986?
Well I'm not sure if we would have won it, but we were a better side
than the Bulls [who finished third in the competition] so we would have
had a better chance than them.
When and why did you leave
the London Ravens?
I joined them in 1984, and it was always a three-year plan. We voted to
be an All-British side. We beat all the British teams, and we even beat
the US Airbase Team [Chicksands]. The club voted to get some Americans
on board, and I wanted to spend more time in the summers with my kids,
so Ron Roberts came in to replace me.
What brought about you taking
over the GB Lions squad for the 1987 European Championship finals?
Warren Tate was the coach and he quit just weeks before the tournament
started. I was asked to take over, and I said I would as a one off,
which it was.
How did you become BAFA
Chairman in 1987?
BAFA was in a real mess in 1987. I was recruited to do 6 months work
there to turn it around. The other two directors of BAFA (Charles
McNamara and Frank Leadon) made me chairman

When the Ravens lost their
opening and only game in Eurobowl 1988, do you think the league
schedule (14 regular season game) hindered them?
No, they should have won that game. I was broadcasting at the game for
Channel 4. That was the turning point for the Ravens, and they
disintegrated very quickly after that. It was a shame as we always had
good unity but seemed to have no game plan for Amsterdam.
With no internet/email in the
80s how difficult was it to organise your team, fixtures, BAFA etc
Surprisingly easy. I held the meetings at my house in London, so there
was no expense to BAFA. All the chairman of all leagues came to my
house for 10am on a Saturday. It was easier to make decisions that way,
and I was on “home turf”.
Do you believe NDMA
qualifications were too stringent for clubs, and that is why many teams
folded?
The NDMA was the flagship league and everyone had aspirations to play
in it. That was where the big sponsors and the TV coverage were. They
had a minimum standard, but I don’t believe that’s
why clubs folded. If a team were good enough they would have made it
i.e. the Ravens.
I guess you would have been
involved in negotiating the Coca Cola sponsorship of the NDMA in 1990?
Yes and no. I had helped BAFA create close ties with the NFL through
the NFL Trust, and Coca-Cola was their sponsor. In my opinion we had to
have an American connection in the sponsorship of the league, as with
big sponsors it would be easier to get better sponsors for clubs and
also promotion of the league. Ron Weisz did the negotiations with them
though.
When the Manchester Spartans
won the NDMA in 1990, why did BAFA take the view that Ipswich Cardinals
(winners of the BNGL in the same year) should play the Spartans in a
qualifier for the Eurobowl competition?
The NDMA
(Manchester Spartans were champions) had
split from the other teams.
The remaining teams were in the BNGL (Ipswich Cardinal were
champions). To
settle who would represent Britain in Europe we decided to have a
playoff game
between the two champions.
In 1993, you got the NDMA to
merge with the BNGL. Was that one of your great wishes?
Yes. If the sport was to go forward as a unit we had to merge them or
we would not have got NFL recognition or Sports Council funding. There
would have been a problem with BAFRA who were refereeing the BAFA
clubs. For sponsorship reasons too, we had to be a unit for image.
Why do you think many clubs folded in the
early to mid 1990s? NFL Europe a factor or lack of coverage on TV?
The profile
died as NFL Europe increased their profile. My original deal
with the NFL was for NFL
Europe to promote our sport by playing a number of high profile and talented players
from Britain. My idea was to get American Football into schools with the help of
the NFL. The combination of high profile in schools and high profile British
amateurs on television
should have boosted our sport.
What is your favourite NFL
team?
The Chicago Bears. I’m from Chicago
When and why did you retire
as BAFA Chairman?
I retired from BAFA in the mid-90s, after we had achieved everything we
wanted to. The main one winning the European Championships [in 1989 and
1991].
What do you consider to be
your greatest achievements as BAFA Chairman?
There were four main achievements:
1. The unification of the sport (some 300 clubs). I got everybody under
one banner (including the refs and the youth game)
2. Getting the Sports Council involved. We had to be unified to get
their recognition of the sport.
3. Getting NFL involvement. This was a big boost to the game.
4. Joining the European Football League, and becoming European
Champions [in 1989 and 1991].
What was your biggest regret
as Chairman?
How fast it all disintegrated after I stepped down.
Have you been or have
considered coming back into Britball?
Not at all. The energy levels are not there. You have to devote so much
to it.
If you had to pick an
All-star British team who are some of the players you would have as a
starter in that side?
Victor Ebubideke without a doubt. If he
had got to the States before he did he could have made the NFL. He
still played NFL Europe and trialled with the NY Jets. His only problem
was his hands. Trevor Carthy was a bit small but he
was fast and could cut on a dime and had good hands too. Dave
Stanton was a great QB who had superb vision and was cool
under pressure. Joe St Louis could break open a
game. Chaz Jasicki had brains and good leadership. Dave
Chambers was an outstanding linebacker, as was John
Aska of the London Ravens at middle linebacker.
Who do you consider to be the
best import players to have played over here?
There’s
so many but on offense Russ Jensen [1988 Birmingham Bulls QB], and on
defense Terry Smith [Manchester Spartans safety] stood out
What was the best British
game you have ever witnessed?
When I was coach of the London Ravens, we played a game away at the
Leicester Panthers. they
had been trained for a solid year by some
Americans, had an American QB, an American
running back, and an American safety. We were trailing at half time, but made some
line adjustments and were just outstanding in the second half.
Who are some of the best
administrators in the game you have worked?
The most effective was Frank Leadon of the
Birmingham Bulls. He always did the most honourable things for the
sport. Charles McNamara was very helpful.
He was a solicitor were dealt with all the admin. He dealt with the
Sports Council and wrote all the legal constitutions. An immeasurable
help. Ron Weitz on the NDMA was excellent. He
really made things happen. Angie Atkins was an
unsung hero. She did all the right stuff, and always voted the right
way for the good of the sport.
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