Dawson was Assistant Manager/Coach in 1968 for the
Lions tour to South Africa and was also a Lions selector. Following his retirement from playing rugby union at the highest level, Dawson was instrumental in developing coaching of the game in Ireland, setting up coaching structures and was the first Irish coach – a role he undertook between 1969 and 1972 (including Coach to the
1970 Irish tour to Argentina). He was an International Selector from 1968 to 1972. Dawson also moved into administration and was elected to the
Irish Rugby Football Union (IRFU) Executive Committee in June 1970 and was President of the IRFU for the 1989–90 season (prior to his retirement from the IRFU Committee in 1994). He was a Trustee of the IRFU. Dawson was an Irish representative on the (as it was then)
Five Nations Committee and Committee of Home Unions from 1973 to 1994 – during this period he was elected to many roles, such as Chairman of Tours Committee, Chairman of Committee of Home Unions and Five Nations Committee. He was also an Irish representative on the
International Rugby Board from 1974 to 1994 (being Chairman in 1983), was a member of the
Rugby World Cup Organising Committee (for the
first RWC tournament) in 1987 and the International Rugby Settlement (RWC Ltd.) between 1990 and 1994. His lifetime contribution to the game of rugby union was acknowledged by the
International Rugby Board firstly in 2004, when he was awarded the Vernon Pugh Award for Distinguished Service and again in 2013, when he was inducted into the
IRB Hall of Fame. His achievements were also recognised by the Dublin Institute of Technology (his
alma mater), who conferred on him an Honorary Doctorate (Doctor of Philosophy) on 1 November 2014, in St. Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin. ==Death==