Full name | Hugh Ferns McLeod | ||
---|---|---|---|
Date of birth | 0 December 0000 | ||
Height | 5ft 9in | ||
Weight | 15 stone 10lbs | ||
Rugby union career | |||
Playing career | |||
Position | Prop | ||
Amateur clubs | |||
Years | Club / team | ||
Hawick RFC | |||
correct as of 15 November 2009. | |||
National team(s) | |||
Years | Club / team | Caps | (points) |
1954-1962 | Scotland | 40 | |
correct as of 15 November 2009. |
Hugh Ferns McLeod is a retired Scottish rugby union player. He played for Scotland forty times between 1954 and 1962.[1][2] He played 14 times for the Barbarians between 1954 and 1959, scoring only once, a try in their 1958 match against East Africa in Nairobi on 28 May 1958 (though this is erroneously listed on the Barbarian website as earning 5 points whereas a try was only worth 3 points at the time).[3] His home team was Hawick RFC.[1] giving rise to his nickname, the Hawick Hardman.[1] Allan Massie describes him as "Hawick through and through, and is indeed now President of the Club".[2]
Hugh McLeod propped alongside Tom Elliot of Gala RFC and David Rollo of Howe of Fife RFC.[2] He was only twenty one when he first played for Scotland, a young age at the time, and retired from international rugby at thirty.[4] He was made pack leader for a while, and the story goes that some of the posher, or anglified players could not actually understand his accent; one of his semi-humorous phrases as pack leader was "Come here, my wee disciples."[4]
Richard Bath writes of McLeod that he
Allan Massie is equally flattering:
He was a personal friend of Bill McLaren, also from Hawick, who describes him as "A man for whom I always have had the highest respect and admiration."[5]
One of the Anglo-Scots is supposed to have said, "Well, I didn't understand a word of that but it all sounded damned impressive.".[6]
Another famous story involving McLeod, and the lock Frans ten Bos and is told by Bill McLaren. On the evening before the 1963 game between Scotland and France at Colombes in Paris, Hugh McLeod and Bill McLaren were out having a meal together and bumped into ten Bos near a cafe.[7] Hugh McLeod took Ten Bos aside, and told him bluntly:
Scotland later won the game 11-6, rare for an away game.[7]
Ten Bos tapped McLaren on the shoulder as they left the cafe, and said, "You know, I'd follow him anywhere."[7]
McLeod retired after forty caps, "because forty is a nice roond figure."[8]
McLeod's hobby in later life has been dog shows mainly using his bulldog Spike.[9]