{{short description|South African cricketer}} {{Use dmy dates|date=March 2020}} {{Infobox cricketer | name = Roy McLean | image = File:South African team in ANZ 1952-53.jpg | caption = The South African touring team in 1952-53.<br>McLean is standing, fourth from the left. | fullname = Roy Alastair McLean | birth_date = {{Birth date|1930|7|9|df=yes}} | birth_place = Pietermaritzburg, Natal, South Africa | death_date = {{death date and age|2007|8|26|1930|7|9|df=y}} | death_place = Johannesburg, South Africa | batting = Right-handed | bowling = | club1 = Natal | year1 = {{nowrap|1949/50–1965/66}} | columns = 2 | column1 = Test | matches1 = 40 | runs1 = 2,120 | bat avg1 = 30.28 | 100s/50s1 = 5/10 | top score1 = 142 | deliveries1 = 4 | wickets1 = 0 | bowl avg1 = – | fivefor1 = – | tenfor1 = – | best bowling1 = – | catches/stumpings1= 23/– | column2 = First-class | matches2 = 200 | runs2 = 10,969 | bat avg2 = 36.68 | 100s/50s2 = 22/65 | top score2 = 207 | deliveries2 = 184 | wickets2 = 2 | bowl avg2 = 61.00 | fivefor2 = 0 | tenfor2 = 0 | best bowling2 = 2/22 | catches/stumpings2= 132/– | international = true | country = South Africa | testdebutagainst = England | testdebutdate = 5 July | testdebutyear = 1951 | lasttestdate = 23 December | lasttestagainst = England | lasttestyear = 1964 | source = http://content-aus.cricinfo.com/ci/content/player/46212.html Cricinfo | date = 3 December | year = 2020 }} '''Roy Alastair McLean''' (9 July 1930 – 26 August 2007) was a South African cricketer who played in 40 Test matches between 1951 and 1964. A stroke-playing middle-order batsman, he scored over 2,000 Test runs, but made 11 ducks in 73 Test innings.<ref name="times">[https://web.archive.org/web/20110524010606/http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/obituaries/article2531673.ece Obituary, ''The Times'', 25 September 2007]</ref>
McLean was born in Pietermaritzburg, Natal, and educated at Hilton College.<ref name="iol"/> He excelled at cricket, hockey and rugby union,<ref name="telegraph">[https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/1561471/Roy-McLean.html Obituary, ''The Daily Telegraph'', 28 August 2007]</ref> and was a strong enough rugby player to represent {{Rut|Natal}} at fly-half.<ref name="dies"/>
As a cricketer, he made his first-class debut for Natal in 1949, and his Test debut on the 1951 tour of England at Old Trafford.<ref name="telegraph"/> He established himself as an exciting and forceful middle-order batsman in the South African team. He was particularly successful on tour, hitting an unbeaten 76 to win the final Test of the 1952–53 tour to Australia, to square the series, despite Australia scoring 520 in their first Innings.<ref name="cricinfo">{{cricinfo|ref=ci/content/player/46212.html}}</ref> He played against the touring Australian rugby union team later in 1953, scoring a drop-goal as fly-half for Natal to win 15–14.<ref name="iol"/><ref name="telegraph"/>
He made his highest Test score in the 2nd Test at Lord's on the tour to England in 1955. Batting against a bowling attack that included Brian Statham, Fred Trueman, Trevor Bailey and Johnny Wardle, he rode his luck, hitting 21 fours and a six but being dropped several times, and scoring 142 of 196 the runs while he was at the wicket, before he was finally bowled by Statham.<ref name="times"/> Nevertheless, England won by 76 runs.<ref>[http://content-uk.cricinfo.com/ci/engine/match/62795.html Scorecard], England v South Africa, 2nd Test at Lord's, 1955.</ref> In the 3rd Test, at Old Trafford, he hooked Frank Tyson for four several times in the second innings, hitting 50 in 71 minutes before he was run out: South Africa won with 9 balls to spare.<ref>[http://content-uk.cricinfo.com/ci/engine/match/62796.html Scorecard], England v South Africa, 3rd Test at Old Trafford, 1955.</ref> He was the South African Cricket Annual Cricketer of the Year in 1955.<ref name="telegraph"/> He and fast bowler Neil Adcock were the only successes of the 1960 tour of England.<ref name="cricinfo"/> He reached his highest first-class score, 207, against Worcestershire, and recorded the fastest century that season, in 75 minutes against A E R Gilligan's XI in a festival match at Hastings, despite only scoring 6 runs in the first half an hour.<ref name="times"/><ref name="iol"/><ref name="telegraph"/> Each was named as a Wisden Cricketer of the Year in 1961.<ref name="cricinfo"/>
In 1961 he led an unofficial tour to England by a team of young players named the Fezelas. The team contained the nucleus of the great South African side of the late 1960s, with such players as Peter Pollock, Eddie Barlow, Colin Bland, Denis Lindsay and Peter van der Merwe, and was unbeaten on the tour.<ref name="cricinfo"/> In the 1966 ''Wisden Cricketers' Almanack'' the editor Norman Preston, reflecting on the success of the touring South Africans in 1965, paid tribute to "that exuberant character R.A. McLean ... who moulded the new Springboks when he brought the Fezela side to England in 1961".<ref>Norman Preston, 'South Africans in England, 1965', ''Wisden Cricketers' Almanack'', 1966, p. 298.</ref>
He played all five Tests when New Zealand toured in 1961–62, a final two Tests against England in South Africa in 1964–65, and retired from first-class cricket in 1966. He became an insurance salesman.<ref name="telegraph"/>
McLean died in Johannesburg following a long illness.<ref name="iol">[http://www.int.iol.co.za/index.php?set_id=6&click_id=18&art_id=vn20070827065736805C940282 Sporting legend Roy McLean dies]</ref><ref name="dies">[http://content-aus.cricinfo.com/australia/content/current/story/308547.html Roy McLean dies aged 77, Cricinfo, 27 August 2007]</ref> He was survived by his wife of 51 years, Barbara, and their three daughters.
==Bibliography of works== * ''Sackcloth Without Ashes'' (1958), Hodder & Stoughton.
==References== {{Reflist}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:McLean, Roy}} Category:1930 births Category:2007 deaths Category:Alumni of Hilton College (South Africa) Category:Cricketers from Johannesburg Category:Cricketers from Pietermaritzburg Category:KwaZulu-Natal cricketers Category:South African cricketers Category:South Africa Test cricketers Category:Wisden Cricketers of the Year Category:South African rugby union players Category:Sharks (rugby union) players Category:Rugby union players from Pietermaritzburg