Whilst playing for Stirling against Melrose, McLaren was given a 26-week ban by the Scottish Rugby Union for being found to have kicked Craig Chalmers in the head, in a ruck. Stirling County had claimed that slow-motion video evidence proved that while Chalmers had, indeed, been kicked, the act had not been deliberate. The SRU stated that it was their intent for a 26-week ban for kicking to the head to be mandatory.[3] At the rugby union ban, McLaren once again took up rugby league.
At the time rugby league had switched to a summer sport in Britain. McLaren signed for Wakefield Trinity Wildcats in 1997. Serving out his rugby union ban in rugby league, he returned to Glasgow Warriors for the start of the 1997–98 season.
Rugby Union
He was named as a replacement in Glasgow's European Conference match at home to Agen on 30 October 1996.[4] He also played in Glasgow's pre-season match against London Scottish coming off the bench to replace Alan Bulloch on 10 August 1997.
However he also played for Caledonia Reds late in season 1997–98.[1]
When Caledonia Reds folded at the end of season 1997–98, McLaren was earmarked to return to Glasgow Warriors. However instead he went to France playing for Bourgoin.
He stayed in Glasgow another two years before returning to France, to play for Begles-Bordeaux, and then Bayonne.
International honours
Rugby League
McLaren won a cap for Scotland in rugby league while at the Wakefield Trinity Wildcats in the 20–22 defeat by France in Glasgow on 9 July 1997.
Rugby Union
His international rugby union début for the Scotland national rugby union team came against Argentina in 1999. He made 30 Test appearances between 1999 and 2003 and finished his representative career playing in all four of Scotland's pool games in the 2003 Rugby Union World Cup.
Personal
Born in Stirling, he emigrated to Australia in 1979.[2]