In 1984, Naar was the NSW Amateur Volleyball Association's director of coaching. In 1985, Naar became the first full-time ACT Amateur Volleyball Association director of coaching. At the same time, his wife was appointed the association's chief executive officer. Between 1986 and 1989, he was
Australian Volleyball Federation's national coaching director. In 1990, he was project manager for the
Confederation of Australian Sport. In 1993, he was appointed executive director of ACT Sports House. In 1995, Naar was appointed high-merformance manager for
Basketball Australia. In March 2000, Naar moved to the
Australian Paralympic Committee (now Paralympics Australia) to take on a leadership position in the lead up to the
2000 Sydney Paralympics. He left Paralympics Australia in 2015. Whilst at Paralympics Australia, he held managerial positions on four Australian teams at the Summer Paralympics including assistant chef de mission for the 2000 Team. The project was awarded funding under the
Australian Research Council Linkage Projects scheme in 2014 through its partnership with the
University of Queensland. Naar continued to lead the project after leaving Paralympics Australia. He has presented at a number of conferences and forums on Paralympic history, including “Disability Sport: A vehicle for social change?” (Centre for Peace and Reconciliation Studies (CPRS) at
Coventry University, 2012), the “International Symposium The Paralympic Movement: Prospect and Legacy of the Tokyo 2020 Paralympic Games” (Tokyo 2015), and “An Inclusive Society Brought About by Paralympic Education: Towards an Understanding of People with Disabilities” (Tokyo 2018) ==References==