Lloyd Clive McDermott

  • 2Caps
  • 470Wallaby Number
PositionLeft Winger
Date Of BirthNovember 24, 1939
Place of BirthEidsvold, QLD
SchoolAnglican Church Grammar School
Debut ClubUniversity (QLD)
ProvinceQLD
Debut Test Match1962 Wallabies v New Zealand, 1st Test Brisbane
Final Test Match1962 Wallabies v New Zealand, 2nd Test Sydney
DiedApril 6, 2019

Biography

Lloyd McDermott was the first Test capped Wallaby to identify as Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander. A winger who possessed electrifying pace, a blinding swerve and a handy side step, McDermott saw the ugly side of racism as a schoolboy and again at club level however he used the experience to push himself in order to achieve success. It was both strength and resilience for which he became synonymous and ultimately saw him climb to the highest levels in both his sporting and professional endeavours, and provide inspiration for all other Indigenous Australians.

Born at Eidsvold, in central north Queensland, McDermott and his sporting prowess won him a church scholarship to attend the Anglican Church of England Grammar School in East Brisbane. He excelled at athletics, won at the underage level and figured in the Churchie teams that were victorious in successive GPS carnivals (1956-57). In his final year McDermott won the open 100 yards and 220 yards sprints. His flashing speed, gave him an affinity with rugby and he played three seasons in the school’s 1st XV (1955-57). Churchie won the GPS premiership in 1955 and 1957, and McDermott was twice selected in the GPS 1st XV (1956-57).

After school, McDermott entered the University of Queensland to study law and in 1961 made his debut for Queensland against Fiji at the Exhibition Ground. The following year McDermott, after just three representative games to his name, was selected to make his Test debut against New Zealand in Brisbane. McDermott was unavailable for the return Wallaby tour to New Zealand then ended his association with rugby even though there was a Wallaby tour of South Africa in the offing in 1963. McDermott explained that he was part of a squad from Queensland and New South Wales who were under consideration to tour South Africa. ‘I really was in a no-win situation because I would have had to be an honorary white for the period of the tour in South Africa, so I withdrew, resigned from rugby and then played rugby league in 1963’ where he linked up with the Wynnum-Manly club in the Brisbane competition.

A decade after his Wallabies debut, McDermott fulfilled his other career ambition. Having graduated in law, he worked in the Commonwealth Deputy Crown Solicitor’s Office and was then admitted as a Barrister in 1972 in New South Wales, becoming Australia’s first Indigenous lawyer. He also earned degrees in criminology and science at the University of Sydney and University of New South Wales. The Lloyd McDermott Rugby Development Team (the ‘Lloydies’) was established in 1991 as a way to introduce rugby union to Indigenous male and female youth across Australia. He also maintained strong links to his life in law.

In 2009, the Bar Association of Queensland launched the Mullenjaiwakka Trust for Indigenous Legal Students named in his honour. The Trust was established to assist Indigenous law students towards a career at the bar. He was also a part-time member of the Mental Health Tribunal of New South Wales, and a trustee of the New South Wales Bar Association Indigenous Lawyers' Trust. Lloyd McDermott played two Tests for Australia in a one-year international career.

Highlights

1962

McDermott won his first Test cap on the left wing in the 1st Test, 6-20 loss to New Zealand at the Exhibition Ground. He retained his position for the 2nd Test, 5-14 defeat at the S.C.G.

Lloyd Clive McDermott