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Final farewell for Bill McLaren Final farewell for Bill McLaren
(about 10 hours later)
The funeral service of rugby commentator Bill McLaren is set to take place in his home town of Hawick. The funeral service of rugby commentator Bill McLaren has taken place in his home town of Hawick.
Mr McLaren, popularly known as the "voice of rugby", died last week at the age of 86. McLaren, popularly known as the "voice of rugby", died last week at the age of 86.
The funeral at Teviot Church in Hawick, followed by a burial at the town's Wellogate Cemetery, is for family, friends and the local community. The funeral at Teviot Church in Hawick, followed by a burial at the town's Wellogate Cemetery, was for family, friends and the local community.
A memorial service for the man whose BBC career spanned almost 50 years is being organised for next month.A memorial service for the man whose BBC career spanned almost 50 years is being organised for next month.
A public address system has been set up to relay the funeral service to any mourners who cannot be accommodated in the Borders church. The 650 mourners who attended the service were given Hawick Balls - the sweet that McLaren famously offered to players before interviews - as they arrived at the church.
Police expect many people to line Hawick's High Street to pay their respects as the cortege passes through the town. A public address system was set up to relay the funeral to the hundreds of mourners who could not be accommodated in the church, and who had gathered to pay their respects as the cortege passed through the Borders town after the service.
The route to be taken is along Buccleuch Street, Sandbed, Albert Bridge, Commercial Road, Mart Street, Bourtree Place, High Street, Backdamgate, Mill Path and Wellogate Brae. While we have shed many tears through sadness, a great many have also been shed simply through bursting with pride Gregor LawsonGrandson
The funeral service is to be conducted by Rev Neil Comb. McLaren's grandson Gregor Lawson told the service that the family had been "blown away" by the tributes, cards, telephone calls and e-mails they had received from across the world since his death.
He said: "We are here to lay to rest a great man - a great Hawick man, a great rugby man and a great family man.
"As a wee laddie he was known as Billy. If he was your teacher, you probably knew him as Mr McLaren. We, his grandchildren, knew him as papa, and he knew us as the Hitler Youth - you didn't think his amazing turn of phrase just went to rugby did you?
"We have been amazed by the response from the media, such touching tributes from the great and the good of the rugby world and far further afield, and just as important people we have met on Hawick High Street over the past week or so.
"So much has already been said by people significantly more important and erudite than me about his unparalleled impartiality, his iconic voice, his professionalism, his gentlemanly nature and his ambassadorship for both rugby and Scotland.
"All I would say is that while we have shed many tears through sadness, a great many have also been shed simply through bursting with pride."
Mr McLaren's coffin was taken to Wellogate Cemetery after the service
Mr Lawson said that what had gone into his grandfather's mouth was often even more remarkable that what came out, with marshmallows in soup and red wine with lemonade among the more unusual tastes McLaren had developed over the years.
He paid tribute to staff at Hawick Community Hospital, who looked after McLaren in his final days.
And referring to McLaren's wife Bette, Mr Lawson said: "Papa used to always say he ranked a distant third in nana's affections behind Frank Sinatra and Glenn Miller.
"We all knew that was just a tease - he was actually fourth behind [former Scotland rugby international] Gregor Townsend."
The funeral service was conducted by Rev Neil Combe, who remembered McLaren as a good neighbour and a very private man who respected the privacy of others.
He added: "One of Bill's greatnesses that will be remembered long after the Voice of Rugby has grown indistinct in people's ears, was his care for his family and for his friends."