McLaren was born in
Hawick,
Roxburghshire, in 1923, to a knitwear salesman from
Loch Lomond-side who had moved down to the area. As a young boy, he was steeped in local rugby stories: In his teenage years, McLaren grew up to be a useful
flank forward. He would later play for
Hawick RFC. He served with the
Royal Artillery in Italy during the
Second World War, He played in a
Scotland trial in 1947 and was on the verge of a full
international cap before contracting
tuberculosis. The disease nearly killed him and forced him to give up playing. He spent 19 months in a
sanatorium in
East Fortune in
East Lothian, where he was given the experimental antibiotic
streptomycin, which saved his life; of the five patients given the drug, only two survived. While in the hospital, he began his broadcasting career, by commenting on table tennis games on the hospital radio. ==Career==