AS today would have been Brian Bevan’s 100th birthday, sports editor Mike Parsons pays tribute to a man whose mind-blowing try-scoring achievements will never be beaten…

IT is hard to comprehend now the scoring prowess of Warrington Wolves’ wing wonder Brian Eyrl Bevan.

The Australian was a one-off and supporters who were around to see him pull on the primrose and blue colours were truly blessed and privileged.

Bev scored a world record 796 tries between 1946 and 1962, 740 of them for The Wire during a club record 620 appearances while a further 56 were added playing for the Other Nationalities representative side and Blackpool Borough – the club with whom he finished his illustrious career.

Wigan great Billy Boston remains his nearest rival in the all-time try-scoring reckoning, 225 behind the Warrington ace, while in modern times Hull KR’s former Leeds Rhinos winger Ryan Hall has recently become the highest Super League try scorer and has clocked up 328 crossings in total.

Yet anyone who met Bevan for the first time would not have looked him up and down and thought ‘rugby league player’ never mind a superstar of the sport.

When he first came to England he had to win over prejudices against his physique.

Brian Bevan's signing for Warrington Wolves and career stats

Warrington offered him an 'A' team trial though and it proved to be a match made in heaven, despite Leeds not fancying him after they had first look.

Bevan became a permanent fixture on the Wire wing for 16 years.

He made his first team Warrington debut at home to Oldham on November 17, 1945, and made a tearful farewell appearance against Leigh on Easter Monday in 1962.

With Bevan in their side, Warrington won 12 major trophies. They won the Rugby League Championship, three times; the Challenge Cup, twice; the Lancashire League, six times and the Lancashire Cup, once.

Bev topped Warrington's try-scoring list every season from 1946/47 to 1960/61 except for 1956/57 when he was hit with injuries.

He scored seven tries in a match twice, six tries in a match four times, five tries in a match six times and four tries in a match 20 times. Bevan also scored 66 hat-tricks.

His side-step was a powerful weapon, possibly second only to his outstanding speed. He also had the ability to swerve away from defenders and to pull up to a stop in an instant.

All of these skills were called upon as he made a fool of even the best of defenders.

Brian Bevan growing up in his native Australia

Bevan was born in Sydney on June 24, 1924.

And as a boy, he spent hours on Bondi Beach, surfing and swimming and developing a seemingly frail body into a fighting frame.

When he first played rugby at primary school, he was a stand off but he fractured an elbow in one game and his father, Rick, who had played for top Sydney Rugby League side Eastern Suburbs during the 1920s, advised him to move out to the wing.

His father took him to all the big rugby league games at the Sydney Cricket Ground and, on his way home, young Bev would side-step all the telegraph poles.

As a youngster, he used to play with 26 marbles, imagining they were 26 rugby league players and, using his finger as the ball, he would work out different moves.

But he enjoyed, and excelled at most sports. Particular favourites were swimming, athletics and cricket.

As a 12-year-old Bevan was the New South Wales sprint champion and he once hit 127 runs not out for his school's first XI.

Brian Bevan's Navy days

On leaving school, Bevan took up an apprenticeship in the printing trade.

But the world was still at war and, in 1942, he joined the Australian Navy at Cairns.

Bevan spent most of his days at sea aboard the HMS Katoomba.

He was chosen to play rugby for the Navy and was rushed ashore but only arrived at the ground after the game had started.

However, wearing a borrowed pair of torn and baggy shorts, he entered the fray and bewildered the opposition by scoring six tries without a hand being laid on him.

Shortly before the end of the war, Bevan was transferred to the HMAS Australia which had been damaged in action and was heading for England for a refit.

Before leaving Australia, Bevan's father gave him a letter of introduction to fellow Australian Bill Shankland, who had played with Bevan senior at Easts in the 1920s.

Shankland, who had played for Warrington in the 1933 and 1936 Challenge Cup finals at Wembley, was then the golf professional at the Temple Newsham Club, near Leeds.

As soon as Bevan got shore leave in England, he travelled to Temple Newsham and introduced himself.

Shankland took Bevan, who was now 21, for trials at Leeds and Hunslet, but neither club showed any interest.

Brian Bevan's Warrington debuts

He advised Bev to try his luck at Wilderspool and he got a run in Warrington's 'A' team as a trialist against Widnes A at Wilderspool on Saturday, November 10, 1945.

Warrington won 23-8 and Bevan astonished the small crowd with his pace.

A minute before the end of the game, he scored a brilliant try from halfway, beating four men on his way to the line.

Bevan made his first-team debut at home to Oldham seven days later in a 12-3 win and signed for Warrington the following day, November 18, 1945, but had to go back to Australia to be demobbed. He arrived back in Warrington in September 1946.

VIEW: 150 Brian Bevan pictures to mark his 100th birthday

His arrival was in time for the first round, second leg of the Lancashire Cup at home to Salford. Bevan scored the first of his 740 tries for the first team - by neatly side-stepping the Salford full back - and added the goal.

That match was the start of an incredible run in which Bevan played in 42 consecutive games until the end of the season and became the club's leading try scorer with 48 and goalkicker with 34.

He also became the first Warrington player to top rugby league's try scorers' list and his 48 tries smashed the club's tries in a season record which stood at 36.

On leaving Wilderspool, Bevan joined Blackpool Borough as a coach in June 1962, before signing as a player for two seasons and scoring 17 tries.

At Halifax in 1964, at the age of 40, he played for Other Nationalities in an international sevens competition and won the trophy for 'Player of the Day'.

Bevan continued to thrill crowds at Testimonial games well into the 1970s.

He died in a Southport hospital at the age of 66 on Monday, June 3, 1991.