Career
Nicknamed Mighty Mouse, he represented Scotland at loosehead prop from 1969 to 1979. His scrummaging and loose play were both of a high standard. Gordon Brown rated him the best prop he had played alongside.
He had to wait until second half of his twenties for a cap, and played for another ten years, before being dropped in 1979.
His nickname "Mighty Mouse" was from the fact that he was relatively small for a prop, but powerful for his size, like the cartoon character of the same name:
"Like McLeod, Ian McLauchlan was short and about as broad as a church door. There was always something a bit odd about his figure even before he acquired a certain rotundity that made him more like a French than a British property
But nobody found him easy to prop against: he burrowed under the opposition."
Richard Bath writes:
"Certainly, McLauchlan was not the conventional size and shape for a loose-head prop in the 1970s, but in many ways it was precisely the combination of an amazing power to weight ratio plus his ability to get under the opposing tight-head that made him such an effective performer in the tight. As a larger than life character, he played best in the most intimidating circumstances.. making him one of Scotland"s most successful captains.
After his retirement the Scottish Rugby Union showed their gratitude by banning him for publishing his autobiography".
On the Lions tour to New Zealand in 1971 he replaced another Scottish loosehead prop Sandy Carmichael who was unlucky to be punched and suffer damage to the cheekbone in Canterbury. He played in eight tests for the British Lions on the 1971 tour to New Zealand and the 1974 tour to South Africa, only once finishing on the losing side.