Strewthcobber
Michael Lynagh (62)
There's a really interesting historical thread running through rugby union.Unfortunately our game has an awful record in terms of inclusion. Until it went professional it was virtually segregated, and Indigenous people have long memories. Apart from that, AFL and NRL are widespread in country areas.
Lloyd McDermott was the first Wallaby of the modern era, in 1962. The Ellas were the next.
Lloyd Mcdermott refused to tour Arpartheid South Africa in 1963 because he wouldn't declare himself an 'honorary white' - (he never played for Australia again). The Wallaby 7 who did tour were so shocked by what they saw that they were driven to be part of the 1971 boycott of the SA tour.
As part of the protests, Wallaby Jim Boyce gave his traded Springbok jerseys to several Aboriginal activists, so they could wear them in response to SA Prime Minister's Vorsters comments that “A black man will never wear the Springbok jersey.”

“It was the perfect opportunity for a bit of political theatre on our part and it proved to be extraordinarily effective. Well the NSW Special Branch of Police who saw us automatically assumed that we'd stolen them, so they grabbed both of us, dragged us inside the motel and paraded the entire South African rugby team in front of us demanding to know which one of them that we'd stolen these football jerseys off. And these South African rugby players were absolutely furious.”
Following that successful protest, some of those activists would then go on to create the tent embassy in Canberra to protest Land Rights
