Career
McDonald had originally been impressed by Bevan"s strength, quickness, length of pass and hard-nosed application and was part of the selection panel that sent Bevan to Australia as an All Black in 1947. Bevan played in all four tests against the 1950 Lions. In the third test at Wellington, Bevan played behind an All Black pack of six, which was shredded by injury and the no-replacement law of the day.
Bevan scolded, spurred and cajoled the pack and showed a perception of pressure points, breadth and alacrity of clearance and physical toughness that were telling factors in transforming a mission impossible into a day of glory for New Zealand rugby.
Bevan based his passing game on his swiftness to retrieve ball hooked at high velocity and on a swivelling dive-pass that foiled marauders and spoilers. He was quick to respond to physical affront, real or imagined, and employed a devastating hip-throw that felled and humiliated many unsuspecting locks and props steamrolling with belligerent intent through the lineout.