Badminton player. An appreciation
NICOL McCloy, who has died aged 74, was one of the great champions of Scottish badminton. He was born and lived his whole life in Greenock and was one of what seemed an endless Greenock conveyor belt of internationals and fine county players. I think of Robert McCoig, Scotland’s greatest all-rounder, Muriel Ferguson, Betty Anderson, Gordon Hamilton, George Forbes, Dave Terry, Peter and Susan Hempsey and, of course, the brothers Gilliland, Alan and Billy.
It was in the clubs and church halls of Greenock that the young Nicol learned his skills.
In the 1960s the game in Europe underwent a coaching revolution. The top players from Denmark and England raised the bar and set new standards in fitness and technique and Scotland struggled to keep up. The response was to establish residential courses at the National Inverclyde Sports Centre and invite renowned international coaches such as Nancy Horner. Nicol was an early and enthusiastic adopter.
Singles was his metier, and he was blessed with quick movement, great stamina and an excellent singles smash. What he also brought to the game was a dedication and work ethic unmatched up to that time. With his great friend George Forbes he played every day at Greenock South Sports Hall, training and practising the Horner routines, and building up a formidable athleticism - all of this before setting off to work at his full-time day job as an HR manager at Scott Lithgows shipyard.
He loved the game, and his enthusiasm and dedication brought him ample reward. Four consecutive national singles titles in the 1970s, 35 caps including Thomas Cup representation and Commonwealth Games in Christchurch.
He might have won more. In the late 1960s he was playing in the finals of the nationals in the Cornmarket in Edinburgh against Robert McCoig whom he was leading. The watching crowd were stunned to hear what sounded like a gunshot resound in the hall. In fact, it was the sound of Nicol’s Achilles tendon snapping, causing his retirement in the final, and a recuperation of six months spent mainly on crutches. It was this injury which ensured he sat out the 1970 Commonwealth Games in Edinburgh, a crushing blow at the time, but one from which he recovered with his characteristic resilience and determination.
Even after time dimmed his remarkable speed and reaction time, his competitive instincts were still intact, as he transferred his affections from badminton to his new passion of golf. And he still knew how to win things. In 2017 he received the trophy for the Greenock Golf club Winter league, lean as a whip and still recognisable from his athletic prime; for him it was merely the latest in a long catalogue of sporting prizes.
The Scott Lithgow shipyard where Nicol spent most of his working life, no longer rolls out ships to sail the world over, and sadly the supply of great Greenock badminton players seems to have dried up.
Let’s hope it is only temporary, and in the meantime we can honour and praise one of our finest singles players.
Nicol is survived by his devoted wife Sheila, and children Lynne , Ross and Caryl.
RONNIE CONWAY
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