Alastair McHarg
Full name | Alastair McHarg | ||
---|---|---|---|
Date of birth | 17 June 1944 | ||
Place of birth | Irvine, Scotland | ||
Occupation(s) | Director of Reading R.F.C. | ||
Rugby union career | |||
Playing career | |||
Position | Lock | ||
Amateur clubs | |||
Years | Club / team | ||
London Scottish FC,
West of Scotland RFC, Anglo-Scots | |||
correct as of 15 November 2009. | |||
National team(s) | |||
Years | Club / team | Caps | (points) |
1968-79 | Scotland | 44 | |
correct as of 15 November 2009. |
Alastair McHarg (born June 17, 1944 in Irvine, Scotland) was a lock (second row forward) for the Scotland national rugby union team, 1968-79.[1] He won 44 caps for Scotland.[1] He frequently partnered Gordon Brown in the Scottish second row.[1]
Like Ian McLauchlan and Gordon Brown who were his contemporaries, he was an Ayrshire man.[2]
Richard Bath writes of him that:
- "At just over 15 stone and just 6ft. 4in., Alastair McHarg was hardly the identikit second row forward, even in the days when they didn't exactly breed 'em huge... A tough and notoriously abrasive Glaswegian, McHarg once joked that his entire playing career was shrouded 'in red mist'. McHarg though, fails to do himself justice with that remark... His speed around the park was perfectly suited to the mobile rucking game played by the Scots, whilst his timing and nous made him a safe bet at the line-out and one of the best number two jumpers of his generation."[1]
Allan Massie says,
- "He was probably the best line-out player Scotland have had. He timed his jump beautifully and could out-leap most of his contemporaries." - but was never selected for Lions.[3]
Massie also valued his entertainment value as much as his skill.
- "[o]f the famous Scottish front five of the early Seventies, Alastair McHarg was the card, the character, the most unorthodox, the greatest fun to watch. He was tall and rangy, a buoyant athlete, a little on the light side for a modern lock... His value in the broken play was incalculable."[3]
Despite his skills, there were those who thought he would have been better cast as a Number 8.[3]
He played for West of Scotland R.F.C. and London Scottish F.C..[1][2] He is now (2005) Director of Rugby at Reading R.F.C..[4] He also played for the Anglo-Scots between 1982-3.
Despite being capped 44 times for Scotland, he was never selected for the British Lions.[1]
References
- Bath, Richard (ed.) The Complete Book of Rugby (Seven Oaks Ltd, 1997 ISBN 1-86200-013-1)
- Massie, Allan A Portrait of Scottish Rugby (Polygon, Edinburgh; ISBN 0-904919-84-6)
External links
- Alastair McHarg - tribute by the Scotsman newspaper
- McHarg gives his views on the SRU coup d'etat - Scotsman newspaper, January 13, 2005
- Sporting Heroes profile