Ireland Between
1981 and
1988, MacNeill made 37 appearances for
Ireland. He made his debut for Ireland on 7 February 1981 against
France at
Lansdowne Road, scoring the first of ten international tries. In the same championship he scored a second try against
Wales and a drop goal against
England. He scored further tries against England in
1982 and
Scotland in
1988. He also scored a penalty against Wales in
1983. MacNeill was a member of the Ireland teams that won the
Five Nations Championship and
Triple Crown in
1982 and
1985 and shared the championship with France in 1983. He was also a member of the Ireland squad at the
1987 Rugby World Cup, where he scored four tries in Ireland's four games, one against
Canada, two against
Tonga and one in the quarter-final defeat to
Australia. MacNeill made his final appearance for Ireland against England on 23 April 1988. Together with
Tony Ward,
Moss Keane,
Donal Spring and
Ciaran Fitzgerald, MacNeill declined to take part in the
1981 Ireland rugby union tour of South Africa during the
apartheid era. In the aftermath of the
1996 Docklands bombing, together with
Trevor Ringland, MacNeill helped organise a friendly between Ireland and the
Barbarians at Lansdowne Road to show that the people of Ireland wanted peace.
British and Irish Lions MacNeill made three test appearances for the
British and Irish Lions during their
1983 tour of New Zealand. MacNeill scored a penalty against
Auckland in the first of his nine appearances on the tour. He started the first two matches against the
All Blacks before coming off the bench to replace
Ollie Campbell in the final test.
French Barbarians On 22 October
1989 MacNeill played for the
French Barbarians against
Fiji. Fiji won the game 32–16. ==Later years==