Amateur career He played rugby for his regiment (The 'Dukes'), the
Army Rugby Union and Combined Services, and club rugby with
Halifax,
Blackheath Rugby Club and
London Scottish RFC.
Provincial career He played for the
Blues Trial side against the
Whites Trial side in
1962 and 1963.
International career His debut for Scotland came against
France at Colombes on 7 January 1961. He went on to gain 23 Scotland caps as he appeared in the next five seasons, twice as captain in 1965. He was picked for the
1962 British Lions tour to South Africa, playing all four internationals at
number eight. But when the Lions team was selected for the
1966 tour, he was 32, no longer captain of his country and the leadership was expected to go to
Alun Pask, the outstanding Welsh No. 8. Massie says that "You would have had no doubt that he [Mike Campbell-Lamerton] could push in the scrum, and with him and
Frans Ten Bos together it achieved a solidity and power that had long been lacking." Campbell-Lamerton was 6 ft 5 inches and 17 stone. However, he also says that Lamerton was not a good national captain: "He was perhaps over-conscientious and a worrier, and hardly spoke the same language as many of the team; it affected his play."The sight of captain M.J. Campbell-Lamerton of the Duke of Wellington's Regiment surging round the tail of a line-out like an enraged hippopotamus was one of the most stirring spectacles in Scottish Rugby. A huge man, 6 feet 5 inches and often over 17 stones, he made an abrupt and unheralded entry into top-class Rugby for a Combined Services team against a Scottish Select at
Murrayfield in December 1960. The game was played in a thick
haar, and almost the only impression spectators retained of it was of this man-mountain surging out of mist as a
mastodon from a primeval swamp. It took him into the Scottish team and he stayed there til 1966 to win twenty-three caps.
Lions in New Zealand (1966) Though the
Lions beat in successive internationals, the
New Zealand section of the tour was marred by ill feeling. After the game with Canterbury, the Lions captain for the day,
Jim Telfer, said at the after match function: "I would not describe today's game as dirty because all our games in New Zealand have been dirty." Understandably this caused a furore but it was the backdrop against which Campbell-Lamerton had to keep his players united. Campbell-Lamerton, would not have been out of place in the modern game: he was a big man, at 6 feet 5 inches, weighing more than 17 stone, yet athletic enough to play No. 8 as well as his accustomed position in the
second row. During the 1966 British Lions tour of New Zealand, his leadership was characterized by a level of commitment that supported the team during a challenging period. At one stage the manager,
Des O'Brien left the party for a reconnaissance mission to
Fiji (where a final tour game was to be played), and the coach,
John Robins, was in hospital with damaged ankle ligaments, leaving Campbell-Lamerton with far greater responsibilities than any modern equivalent would face. Yet in a squad which he had not been expected to captain, his players still speak warmly of the example he set after a tour in which the Lions lost all four internationals against the
All Blacks. The recurrence of an ankle injury which caused his withdrawal from the second game against New Zealand, did not help and he also missed the final international. "Mike was a decent man and much-maligned", Brian Price, his second-row partner in three of the tour internationals, said. "We knew how hard he was working and it was because we respected his efforts, we stuck together."
Coaching career After the tour he retired from playing rugby. In 1972 he was appointed to coach the British Combined services team. ==Post-military==