McLean Family (rugby footballers)
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McLean Family (rugby union footballers)
The McLean family were a remarkable Australian rugby clan who between them played 77 Tests for the Australian national rugby union team and a number of Tests for the Australian national rugby league team.
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[edit] Doug McLean Sr
Doug James McLean (1880 - 1947) was the patriarch. He was a pioneer Australian representative rugby union and rugby league player, a dual code international. He represented as a winger with the Wallabies in 3 Tests, twice against the touring Great Britain side in 1904 and then in New Zealand the following year. He was a foundation Australian rugby league player at the code's formation in Sydney in 1908 and played on the wing in the first ever Australian rugby league Test against New Zealand in Sydney in 1908.
McLean Sr was one of five former Wallabies who debuted for the Kangaroos in that inaugural Test along with Dally Messenger, Micky Dore, Denis Lutge and Johnny Rosewell.
Doug had three sons and three grandsons who also played for Australia:
[edit] Doug McLean Jr
Alexander Douglas McLean (1912 - 1961) played 10 Tests for the Wallabies between 1933 and 1936. He too was a dual code international. He switched to the professional code and represented the Kangaroos on the wing in two Tests against New Zealand in 1937 and on eight tour games of the 1937 Tour of Great Britain and France.
His international rugby league debut in Auckland against New Zealand on 7 Aug 1937 saw Doug jnr become Australia's 22nd dual code rugby international, following Clarrie Prentice and preceding Len Smith. He was Australia's only dual code international of the 1930s and the first for 18 years.
[edit] Bill McLean
William Malcolm McLean (1918 - 1996) played 5 Tests as captain of the Wallabies immediately after WWII and then was selected to lead the side to tour Great Britain, Ireland and Wales in 1947-48. He broke a leg early in the tour and did not play in any further Tests.
[edit] Jack McLean
Jack McLean was a member of the 1946 Wallaby team that toured New Zealand though he didn't make the Test XV.
A fourth son Bob McLean had two sons who won Test caps:
[edit] Jeff McLean
Jeffrey James McLean born 1947, played 13 times for the Wallabies between 1971 and 1974.
[edit] Paul McLean
Paul Edward McLean born 1953, was the most feted and successful footballer of the family. Paul was capped 31 times between 1974 and 1982 either at fullback or more frequently at fly half. He was a world-class goalkicker and at his prime there was no better tactical kicker in the game. He was also a gifted runner and passer when he took those options although later in his career critics were regularly calling for Mark Ella's more obvious running game to be brought into the Wallaby side. In his 1982 farewell international season McLean smashed his own point scoring record with 21 points (five penalties and three conversions) in the 2nd Test against Scotland, a record which stood for eight years.
Brisbane newspaper journalist Hugh Lunn recorded the following epitaph on McLean's career in The Australian: "Paul McLean played 31 Test matches for Australia and one hundred games for Queensland; he won the rugby premiership for his school (St Josephs Nudgee) with a 55m penalty kick; Brothers club lost only one of the eight grand finals in which he played; he scored exactly one thousand points for Queensland in his one 100th match in the last match of Queensland Rugby's Centenary year; he kicked 14 consecutive goals against Wales on their Australian tour; he holds the individual Australian point scoring record for a Test match of 21 points and he is the greatest point scorer in the history of Australian Rugby Union".
Paul McLean since 2005 has been the President of Rugby Australia.
[edit] Peter McLean
Bill's son Peter William McLean born 1952 also represented at lock for the Wallabies. He made 16 Test appearances between 1978 and 1982 , playing 11 times alongside his cousin Paul.
[edit] Sources
- The Spirit of Rugby 1995 (Collection of Essays) HarperCollins, Australia