The cricketing community in Somerset is mourning the loss of club chairman Charles Clark, who died on Friday morning, writes Richard Walsh.

Clark, who was born and educated in Somerset and was a senior partner at Greenslade Taylor Hunt, began serving on the committee in 2010 and became club chairman in January 2018.

Clark, a life-long Somerset supporter, commented that his appointment to the role of chairman was ‘a dream post’. During the same speech he also recounted his first visit to Taunton to watch Somerset play.

“My father was an auctioneer in Taunton Market and he brought me across to my first ever game in July 1967,” he said. “We were playing Pakistan that day. That year my grandfather gave me my first ever Wisden and I have got that every year since then.”

One of Clark’s final appearances at the Cooper Associates County Ground was on Friday, May 31, when the players returned to the ground to celebrate their one-day trophy success and meet supporters.

Somerset CCC chief executive Andrew Cornish said: “In the short time I knew Charles I found him to be a man of great integrity. His passion for Somerset cricket was second to none and his enthusiasm for the club was infectious. He also took a huge amount of pride in his work.

“Even as his health faltered, his love for the club remained undiminished. We are all so pleased that Charles was able to be at Lord’s to see the club he loved lift the Royal London One-Day Cup on that fabulous day.

“The thoughts of everyone at the club are with his wife Rebecca and his entire family at this sad time.”

Somerset president Brian Rose said: “I knew Charles for a long time, and he was a Somerset man through and through. He took a huge interest in every element of the club, from the progress of the Academy players all the way through to the development of the Cooper Associates County Ground.

“Charles was of the opinion that Somerset was the best club in the country, and he made it his mission to convince everyone he met that this was the case. He took his role very seriously and took huge pride in how the county club was helping to develop the game from grass roots level through to the international arena. Somerset matches won’t be quite the same without him.”