Syd Malcolm

Syd Malcolm (1902–1987) was an Australian rugby union player, a state and national representative half-back who captained the Wallabies' on seventeen occasions between 1928 and 1933.

Syd Malcolm
Birth nameSydney James Malcolm
Date of birth10 December 1902
Place of birthMerewether, New South Wales
Date of death23 July 1987
Weight10 st 6 lb (146 lb; 66 kg)
Rugby league career
Position(s) Half-back
Senior career
Years Team Apps (Points)
1925-1926 Ipswich St Pauls ()
State of Origin
Years Team Apps (Points)
1925 Queensland 1 ()
Rugby union career
Position(s) Half-back
Amateur team(s)
Years Team Apps (Points)
Cook's Hill Surf Club ()
Newcastle YMCA 6 ()
Senior career
Years Team Apps (Points)
Glebe-Balmain RUFC 12 ()
Manly RUFC 41 ()
Provincial / State sides
Years Team Apps (Points)
1927-1934 New South Wales 28 ()
National team(s)
Years Team Apps (Points)
1927-1934 Australia 18 (6)

Youth and representative debut

Malcolm left Newcastle, New South Wales in his teens to seek work and found it at Ipswich, Queensland as a boilermaker. He played rugby league in 1925-26 with the St Paul's club in Ipswich, achieving representative honours for Queensland in 1925.[1]

His first representative rugby union appearances were on the 1927-28 Waratahs tour of Britain, France and Canada for which Malcolm was one of three half-backs selected along with Wally Meagher and Jack Duncan from Randwick. Meagher started as the preferred Test half and when Malcolm dislocated his shoulder in the match against Oxford University not yet half-way into the tour it looked as though he would have disappointing memories of the trip.

He was side-lined for many matches (ultimately only playing in 11 of the 31 official tour matches) but his capabilities had been noticed. After his shoulder recovery he was selected in the final three Tests against Scotland, England and France. He finished the tour as Australia's number one half-back and returned to Newcastle a hero, but keen to relocate to Sydney to play club rugby there.

Playing style

Malcolm provided quick service from the scrum base with a fast but not particularly long pass. He was quick to spot and exploit an opening but was most respected for his courage and determination when the going got tough. The Howell reference describes him as "courage personified".[2]

Representative career

Malcolm, last in line to meet the Duke of York before his 2nd Test appearance Twickenham, 7 Jan 1928
Malcolm (3rd from right) with victorious Bledisloe Wallabies, 1st Test v NZ 11Aug1934

When the Waratahs toured New Zealand in 1928 Malcolm was named as captain. The team was full of new blood with only Cyril Towers and Geoff Bland continuing on for the 1927 World Tour squad. Syd Malcolm played in seven of the ten matches; five in total were won and five lost.

In 1929 the All Blacks toured Australia, Tom Lawton took over as captain but Syd Malcolm was in the side which won all three Tests in an upset. With the Queensland Rugby Union now back in existence for the first time since 1919 this was the first truly national Wallabies side fielded since 1914 and the first time in history any nation had beaten the All Blacks in a 3-0 series whitewash.

Great Britain toured Australia in 1930 and Malcolm played in two tests and twice against them for New South Wales. Then in 1931 a full Australian side was sent to New Zealand. Syd Malcolm was the captain and part of the senior playing group with Cyril Towers and Alex Ross from the 1927 side. They won three, drew one and lost six matches including the single Test. In 1932 Malcolm again met the All Blacks in three Test appearances when they came to Australia - he was captain in one of those encounters but also captained New South Wales against them.

In 1933, Malcolm was in the squad that made Australia's first ever rugby tour of South Africa. He made eleven appearances including two Tests, one as captain. Syd Malcolm made his final international appearances against New Zealand in 1934, finishing his representative career after eight years and forty five internationals including eighteen Tests.

Preceded by
Johnnie Wallace
Australian national rugby union captain
1928-33
Succeeded by
Bob Loudon
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References

Sources

Footnotes

  1. "Queensland Representative Players". qrl.com.au. Australia: QRL. Archived from the original on 1 December 2011. Retrieved 6 March 2011.
  2. HowellWallaby Test Captains p 97
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