- Bill McLaren
Bill McLaren
CBE (born 1923) is a Scottish formerrugby union commentator , known as 'the voice of rugby', renowned the world over until his retirement in 2002.Early life
McLaren was born in
Hawick in 1923 and grew up to be a talented flanker. He made the Hawick first XV before serving with theRoyal Artillery in Italy during theSecond World War . He played in a Scotland trial in 1947 and was on the verge of a full international cap when he contracted tuberculosis which nearly killed him and forced him to give up playing. He spent 19 months in a sanitarium before being given an experimental drug which saved his life.Career
McLaren studied
Physical Education inAberdeen , and went on to teach Physical Education in different schools in Hawick right through to 1987, coaching several players who went on to play for Scotland -Jim Renwick ,Colin Deans andTony Stanger .It was through his junior reporting with the Hawick Express that he launched himself into a career of commentary, making his national debut for
BBC Radio in 1953, when Scotland were beaten 12-0 by Wales.The switch to television came six years later. Recognition of his services came in November 2001, when he became the first non-international to be inducted into the
International Rugby Hall of Fame . He was also awarded a CBE in 2002.McLaren belongs to the great pantheon of post-war commentators who came through
BBC radio to television in its infancy -Murray Walker (motor racing),Peter O'Sullevan (horse racing),Harry Carpenter (boxing and rowing),Dan Maskell (tennis),David Coleman (athletics),Peter Allis (golf) andJohn Arlott (cricket).ee also
*
Scottish rugby commentators and journalists
*Scotland national rugby union team External links
* [http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/rugby_union/1777674.stm Bill McLaren: the voice of Rugby Union] - BBC report
* [http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/rugby_union/1780093.stm A reluctant legend] - Nigel Starmer-Smith pays tribute to his colleague
* [http://thescotsman.scotsman.com/rugby.cfm?id=384482005 McLaren says Lions coach's selection a 'huge insult'] - The Scotsman, April 12, 2005
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.