Laurie Daley

Playing Career

Vital Statistics

Born
Monday, 20th October, 1969
Current Age
54 years and 361 days
Place Of Birth
Junee, New South Wales, Australia

Honours & Awards

Based only on data available in the RLP database. This information should be used as a guide only.

World Cup
1989/1992
The Ashes
1990, 1992, 1994
Test Series
Australia vs New Zealand 1991, New Zealand vs Australia 1993, Great Britain vs Australia SL 1997
Anzac Tests
1997, 1998, 1999
State of Origin
1990, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1996
NSWRL Premiership (NRL)
1989, 1990, 1994
Challenge Cup AU
1990, 1993
Dally M Five-Eighth Of The Year
1995, 1996
Dally M Player Of The Year
1995
RLW Player of the Year
1995
Dally M Captain Of The Year
1996
National Rugby League Hall Of Fame
2008
NSWRL Hall Of Fame
2017

Biography

Signed by Don Furner in 1986 after he was spotted playing first grade at Junee as a 16-year-old Laurie Daley was graded in the club's Jersey Flegg side in 1987. By the end of the year he was sitting on the bench in the Raiders' grand final loss to Manly. Daley never played a reserve grade game during his career and represented Country Origin in 1988 after only a handful of matches. In 1989 he broke into the NSW team as a centre and played a major role in Canberra's triumphant fightback in the grand final against Balmain. His head bandaged after suffering a nasty gash, Daley threw the overhead pass that resulted in John Ferguson's try and took the match into extra-time. During the 1990s Daley showed his immeasurable talents at both centre and five-eighth. He partnered Allan Langer against NZ in his Test debut 1990 and showed big-match experience beyond his years in scoring a great try in Canberra's grand final win over Penrith that year. In what became a familiar pattern during his career, an injured hand kept him out of the First Test on the 1990 Kangaroo Tour and he played in just 6 matches, including three Tests. In 1991 Daley recovered from yet another injury to take his place in the deciding two Tests of the Trans Tasman series but he was not as effective in the Raiders’ grand final loss to Penrith because of a knee injury. At age 22 in 1992, he captained NSW Country to its first win over City in 17 years before leading NSW to State of Origin victory. Daley was selected in the centres against Great Britain but was moved back to pivot for the deciding Third Test of the Ashes series. Injury ruled him out of Australia's World Cup triumph at year’s end but in 1993, he deputised for the suspended Mal Meninga and captained Australia in the First Test against the Kiwis in Auckland. Daley's coolly-potted field goal salvaged a 14-all draw against NZ before Meninga returned to lead Australia to a series victory. 1994 saw Daley's reputation as one of the world's best players secured. He captained NSW to victory in a third consecutive State of Origin series; was the architect of Australia's 58-0 thrashing of France at P’matta Stadium and played a starring role in Canberra's grand final rout of C’bury. To cap a memorable year he was a try-scorer in each of Australia's three Test wins on the Kangaroo Tour. As unofficial 'vice-captain' on the 1994 tour, and with a taste of the Australian Test captaincy already behind him, Daley was the logical successor to out-going Test captain Mal Meninga until a pre-season controversy concerning the choice of Ricky Stuart as Canberra captain seemed to cloud the issue. This problem, which was momentarily solved when Stuart relinquished the captaincy, paled into significance once Daley and his Canberra team-mates aligned with Super League. Stood down from representative duty in 1995 by the ARL Daley was nevertheless named ‘Dally M’ Player of the Year and was regularly used as a ‘rebel’ figurehead during the ensuing years. In 1996 Daley was overlooked for the NSW captaincy and declined an Australian Test jersey along with a swag of Super League-signed players when an increasingly isolated ARL tried to sanction a match against a ‘NZ’ team chosen from domestic club players. In the divided 1997 season he valiantly led Super League’s NSW team to Tri-Series victory and Australia to series wins over NZ and Great Britain. Daley never gave anything short of his best and in the reunited 1998 season, retained the Australian captaincy for the ANZac Test. Australia lost the Test, 22-16, and injury saw him miss the two post-season Tests against NZ. Daley returned to the Australian Test team in the ANZac Day Test in the early part of 1999 (minus the captaincy in what was to be his final match for Australia) but he clearly struggled when his hamstring injury again flared. Following the departure of Ricky Stuart and Bradley Clyde Raiders’ fans were buoyed by the news that Daley would see out his career with the club. After playing for NSW in three State of Origin matches, injury ruled him out of Australia’s Tri-Nations campaign in October 1999. The then record holder for most first grade games with the Raiders (since surpassed by Jason Croker) Daley reluctantly announced his retirement midway through the 2000 season due to chronic knee problems. Daley joined Fox Sports and won a place on the NSW selection panel. In 2001 the Canberra club unveiled a statue at Bruce Stadium in his honour – a fitting tribute to one of the greats of the modern era. Biography: Always a Winner (2000).
- ALAN WHITICKER

Playing Career Statistics

All statistics shown in this section are based only on data available in the RLP database, and are not necessarily a complete and/or 100% accurate representation of a player's career. This information should be used as a guide only. If you see a question mark (?), it denotes that the figure is not available.

To view a list of corresponding matches, click on the List button.

Competitions

Competition   Comp Wins App T G   GK % FG Pts W L D Win %  
Anzac Tests 3 3 - -   - - 2 1 0 66.67% List
The Ashes 3 8 3 -   - 24 6 2 0 75.00% List
World Cup 1 5 4 0   - 16 5 0 0 100.00% List
Tour Matches Australia - 21 10 1   - 42 19 2 0 90.48% List
Test Series 6 15 9 -   2 26 11 3 1 73.33% List
State of Origin 5 23 6 1   - 26 13 9 1 56.52% List
City vs Country - 7 3 -   - 12 3 4 0 42.86% List
NSWRL/ARL/Super League/NRL Premiership 3 245 87 44   9 445 157 84 4 64.08% List
NSWRL/ARL/Super League/NRL Finals - 27 6 6   - 36 15 12 0 55.56% List
World Club Challenge - 1 - -   - - 0 1 0 0.00% List
Midweek Cup - 1 - -   - - 0 1 0 0.00% List
Challenge Cup AU 2 12 4 -   1 17 9 3 0 75.00% List


International

Test Matches - By Team

Team Years   App T G   GK % FG Pts W L D Win %  
Australia 1990-94, 1998-99   21 11 -   2 46 17 3 1 80.95% List
Australia (SL) 1997   5 4 -   - 16 3 2 0 60.00% List
Overall1990-1999   26 15 0   2 62 20 5 1 76.92% List

World Cup Matches - By Team

Team Years   App T G   GK % FG Pts W L D Win %  
Australia 1990-92   5 4 -   - 16 5 0 0 100.00% List


Representative

Australia - By Team

Team Years   App T G   GK % FG Pts W L D Win %  
NSW Country 1988-90, 1992-94, 1996   7 3 -   - 12 3 4 0 42.86% List
NSW 1989-94, 1996, 1998-99   23 6 1   - 26 13 9 1 56.52% List
NSW (SL) 1997   3 - -   - - 3 0 0 100.00% List
Overall1988-1999   33 9 1   0 38 19 13 1 57.58% List


Club Career

NSWRL/ARL/Super League/NRL Premiership - By Year

Team Season   App T G   GK % FG Pts W L D Win %  
Canberra NSWRL 1987 Winfield Cup   7 2 -   - 8 4 3 0 57.14% List
Canberra NSWRL 1988 Winfield Cup   19 12 -   - 48 11 8 0 57.89% List
Canberra NSWRL 1989 Winfield Cup   21 16 27 / 46 58.70% - 118 15 6 0 71.43% List
Canberra NSWRL 1990 Winfield Cup   20 9 3 / 5 60.00% - 42 14 5 1 70.00% List
Canberra NSWRL 1991 Winfield Cup   14 3 1 / 2 50.00% - 14 11 3 0 78.57% List
Canberra NSWRL 1992 Winfield Cup   7 3 -   2 14 4 3 0 57.14% List
Canberra NSWRL 1993 Winfield Cup   21 6 -   1 25 14 6 1 66.67% List
Canberra NSWRL 1994 Winfield Cup   15 5 -   1 21 10 5 0 66.67% List
Canberra ARL 1995 Winfield Cup   23 11 2 / 7 28.57% - 48 20 3 0 86.96% List
Canberra ARL 1996 Optus Cup   21 3 4 / 12 33.33% - 20 12 8 1 57.14% List
Canberra Super League 1997 Telstra Cup   21 5 7 / 10 70.00% 2 36 12 9 0 57.14% List
Canberra 1998 NRL Premiership   10 2 -   - 8 5 5 0 50.00% List
Canberra 1999 NRL Premiership   20 5 -   2 22 10 9 1 50.00% List
Canberra 2000 NRL Telstra Premiership   26 5 0 / 2 0.00% 1 21 15 11 0 57.69% List

NSWRL/ARL/Super League/NRL Premiership - By Team

Team Years   App T G   GK % FG Pts W L D Win %  
Canberra 1987-00   245 87 44 / 84 52.38% 9 445 157 84 4 64.08% List

Your Say

  • Jason Ganter
    28/04/2009

    This bloke should have been a Queenslander, never gave up. I really enjoyed watching him play.

  • scott
    22/09/2012

    i think laurie was the best player in the world he took nsw to mighty victorys and australia and won three premierships in my eyes he is the best i have ever saw

  • Anonymous
    25/03/2020

    Lol he should have been a queenslander. He was better then any queensland player . He was definitely better then wally lewis

  • Anonymous
    15/10/2021

    Laurie should already be a immortal

  • Framey
    04/12/2021

    He was a consistant standout performer in any ream he played in Australia.NSW and the raiders in their golden era hes the type of player that got people excited when he was involved in the game

  • april schmetzer
    26/04/2022

    this guy was the greatest 5/8 ever to play the game.

  • Stauto
    03/06/2023

    The closest New South Wales ever got to having Wally Lewis in their team.

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Contributions: Rugby League Tables, Andrew Ferguson, Shawn Dollin, AJ Lucantonio, Greg Fiveash, Paul Carter, Terry Liberopoulos, Bill Bates, Max Turner, Alan Katzmann, Steven Russo

Sources: David Middleton's Rugby League Yearbook (1987-88 to present), Official NRL Website, Match Video