I tried drawing Coney. Progress is a work in progress.
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I tried drawing Coney. Progress is a work in progress.
The voice of rugby and all round good guy Bill McLaren was born on October 16th 1923 in Hawick.
Murdoch McLaren and Margaret Sutherland Guy, Murdoch having come to Hawick from Bonhill in Dunbartonshire to work for a knitwear firm and duly fallen in love with local girl "Maggie". They had three children, Jessie, William Pollock and Kit, now the last surviving member of the family. Murdoch was a football man, but he took to Hawick life with enthusiasm and his love of sport moved him to rugby, where he introduced young Bill to the "Greens" and Scotland, whom Bill first watched play against Ireland at the age of eight. Aged 12 he and his father joined the throng heading south to Twickenham for his first experience of London and a Calcutta Cup match, but by then he was already showing signs of interest in a career that was to make him famous across the globe.
A talented flanker in his youth, he served with the Royal Artillery during World War II and had later been on the verge of a full Scotland cap when he contracted tuberculosis, which almost killed him.
"I was desperately ill and fading fast when the specialist asked five of us to be guinea pigs for a new drug called Streptomycin," he once recalled.
"Three of the others died but I made what amounted to a miracle recovery."
McLaren's first commentary was made while convalescing from TB, describing table tennis matches for the hospital radio.
As a child, he had copied the voices of the rugby commentators he heard on the radio, and wrote fictional accounts of matches which always saw Scotland triumph over the rest of the world.
His career progressed rapidly, and he made his national debut for BBC radio in 1953, when Scotland were beaten 12-0 by Wales, before switching to television six years later.
The depth of McLaren's research became legendary, and he would spend days watching teams train in the week before a match, and then spend nights practising with his own special packet of cards.
His voice was instantly recognisable, and generations of rugby fans grew up listening to a man they believed to be fair, knowledgeable, and a lover of the game.
Among the personal highlights of his career were the commentary for Scotland's Grand Slam victory over England at Murrayfield in 1990.
While his voice was almost operatic in its clarity and range as he described his son-in-law Alan Lawson scoring against England in 1976, when he managed to convey the excitement of the moment without bias, as only he could.
He combined his commentating with working as a physical education teacher in his hometown of Hawick, in the Scottish Borders, where he had been born in 1923.
By the time he retired from teaching in 1987, he had coached several players who went on to play for Scotland, including Jim Renwick, Colin Deans and Tony Stanger.
The committed family man lived in Hawick with his wife Bette, whom he had met on a blind date at in the town's hall in 1947.
The couple famously used to play 18 holes of golf together every day, while McLaren claimed that every day out of Hawick "was a day wasted".
After a distinguished career, McLaren retired in 2002. His final commentary was Scotland's match with Wales, when the crowd sang For He's a Jolly Good Fellow in his honour.
He became the first non-international rugby player to be inducted into the International Rugby Hall of Fame.
In later life, McLaren contracted Alzheimer's, such a cruel thing to happen to a man renowned for his excellent memory.
McLaren died on 19 January 2010 at the age of 86 in his home town of Hawick.
मशहूर कॉमेंटेटर जसदेव सिंह का निधन, 9 ओलंपिक के लिए की थी कॉमेंट्री प्रख्यात कमेंटेटर जसदेव सिंह का 87 साल की उम्र में निधन हो गया है. Source link
"En el #automovilismo y en especial en la #f1 #formula1 se pierde más veces de las que se gana" Eso me dijo @davidcoulthardf1 / "In #motorsports particularily in @f1 you loose more times than you win" He said. Are you agree? #competition #racing #racingclub #motorsport #motorshow #legend #formulaone #drivers #pilotos #expilotof1 #comentator @skysports @skysport_f1 @channel4 #british #driver #expert #f1driver #f1lovers #f1rwheels #f1pics #f1facts #omarketing #formulauno #enlomio @redbullracing @mclaren @mclarenmercedes2014 @mclarenauto @f1paddockpass @f1paddockclub
More swedish commentry sassyness
-Great, then we got both the music and the medieval fantasy faire out of the way
-Many people ask why they're speaking french... It's kinda like the brawn on the christmas table, no one really wants it but it would be a shame to break the tradition
I'm pretty sure that the guy who peaked out behing the curtain is the swedish comentator cuz he said like three seconds before they showed Graham tjat he sat in the booth next to them
polish comentator is the best- ‘this dress is quite too tight’ hahahah