Previously a physical education teacher and national coaching director of the Rugby Football League, Larder was one of the first defence coaches in professional rugby union, and is considered a pioneer in applying rugby league expertise to the defensive side of rugby union.
He played rugby union as a centre for Broughton Park, playing regularly in the first team by the age of 16. He later played for Manchester and Sale, and became known as a particularly good sevens player.
Larder found the travelling required to play rugby union incompatible with his work at Saddleworth, so moved to rugby league, where games were concentrated in the north of England. He was first approached by Leigh but opted to sign for Oldham. He played in Oldham's defeat by St. Helens in the 1968 Lancashire Cup final, and later moved to Whitehaven.[4]
Coaching career
Rugby league
Larder taught at Saddleworth School for 16 years, becoming Head of Physical Education before leaving in 1982.
In 1982, he was appointed Director of Coaching for the Rugby Football League. Following Australia's 40-4 win in the first Ashes series test over Great Britain as part of the 1982 Kangaroo tour, Larder realised that the Australians had left the British game behind and urgent change was needed. Larder spent a week with Kangaroos coach Frank Stanton before the second test in Wigan to observe the Kangaroos' coaching and training methods. Stanton first obtained approval of this from the Australian Rugby League who raised no objections. Although the Australian's had begun to dominate international rugby league since the mid-late 1970s, the ARL recognised that for the international game to grow, Britain needed to have a strong international presence.
Larder subsequently made further visits to Australia, and was influenced by coaches such as Arthur Beetson and "Supercoach" Jack Gibson, who himself had spent time in America during the 1970s studying coaching and training methods in the NFL, especially those used by successful Green Bay Packers coach Vince Lombardi. With what he had learned, Larder overhauled the coach education system in rugby league and his work saw the sport in Britain become more professional.
He coached England at the 1995 World Cup, where they defeated Australia in the opening game at Wembley, but ultimately lost the World Cup final to the Kangaroos. Larder was coach of Great Britain on their disastrous 1996 tour of Fiji, Papua New Guinea and New Zealand. The Lions did not win a match in New Zealand, and several players had to return home early to save costs.
He remained part of the England coaching staff until April 2006, when he was sacked along with Joe Lydon and Dave Alred following the team's poor Six Nations performance. Larder later criticised coach Andy Robinson for letting player power run the team in his 25-month period in charge.[7]
Larder worked with Worcester Warriors as a defensive coach on a part-time basis in 2006-2007[8] and returned to the club in 2011,[9] before leaving in May 2013.
Works
Larder has written two books on coaching rugby league – The Rugby League Skills Manual, published in 1983 and The Rugby League Coaching Manual, published in 1988.
In 2015, his biography The Iron Curtain: My Rugby Journey from League to Union, written with Nick Bishop, was published.
He has also produced two coaching DVDs – Knock Them Down and Iron Curtain Defence, both released in 2009.