His representative debut was as a 19-year-old in 1926 when selected for the
New South Wales Waratahs to appear against a touring
All Blacks outfit. New South Wales won the match 26–20 and Towers was recalled for the fourth encounter which the hosts lost 21–28. With no
Queensland Rugby Union administration or competition in place from 1919 to 1929, the
New South Wales Waratahs were the top Australian representative
rugby union team of the period and these debut matches were in 1986 decreed by the
Australian Rugby Union as official Test matches. Towers was selected for the
1927–28 New South Wales rugby union tour of the British Isles, France and Canada, turning 21 on the ship going over. He played in 25 matches of the tour exceeded only by Wylie Breckenbridge (29),
Tom Lawton (27) and
Alex Ross (29). With Jack Ford he was the equal top try scorer and the equal second highest point scorer behind Lawton. He played in three Test matches of the tour. He wrote a travel diary of the 1927–28 tour which was serialised between June and December 1928 for the magazine
Australian Banker. (Towers worked in banking). His Test match reports are quoted extensively in the
tour article. Towers toured
New Zealand in 1928 with the
Waratahs under
Syd Malcolm as captain.
Geoff Bland was the only other veteran from the 1927 World Tour squad and five matches in total were won and five lost. Towers played in all matches, including three Tests and was top scorer with 29 points. Howell quotes Chester and McMillan from
The Visitors:
"Towers was hailed by many critics as the best centre in the world rugby and was certainly one of the great Australian players of all time". In 1929 the
All Blacks toured Australia, Towers was in two of the three Test team captained by
Tom Lawton which for the first time in history beat the All Blacks 3–0 in a series whitewash. With the
Queensland Rugby Union now back in existence for the first time since 1919 this was the first truly national
Wallabies team fielded since 1914. ==National captain==