K. G. MacLeod

[2] He then went to Cambridge University and played for their rugby team, winning nine more international caps at the time.

He retired at twenty one at the urging of his father, because his two elder brothers had been seriously injured playing rugby.

[2] Allan Massie writes: Perhaps the most remarkable player to appear in the Edwardian Era was K.G.

It is perhaps a reflection of the way in which the forwards had become subordinate to the backs and reduced to the role of feeders that in the 1907 Calcutta Cup, MacLeod should have tried, and failed with, no less than six long-range drop-goals.

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