After having made his representative début in the centres for NSW in the second game of the 1981 Interstate series against
Queensland at Sydney's
Leichhardt Oval (the last game played under the old "State of Residence" rules), Cleal represented the NSW Blues in 12
State of Origin games between 1984 and 1988. Some of Cleal's best football was played at the State of Origin level, he was the NSW forward who troubled Queensland most at a time when the Blues were just beginning to match the passion of their interstate rivals. He is commonly known as the man who coined the inspirational phrase "Dare to Dream" which was an extract from the game and series winning pep talk given by him during half time of game 2 of the 1985 state of origin series. Noel Cleal's most famous moment in Origin football was also an embarrassing one. During Game 2 of the
1984 series on a wet and very muddy Sydney Cricket Ground, Cleal attempted a goal-line drop out after the Blues had been caught in their own in-goal area. Unfortunately for Cleal and NSW, his attempted kick travelled less than a metre resulting in a Qld penalty from which
Mal Meninga scored two vital points. Cleal's kick was made to look worse later in the game when Qld captain
Wally Lewis kicked a 45-metre drop-out from the same spot. However, Lewis later admitted that he had used his teammates to distract referee
Barry Gomersall enough so that he did not drop-kick the ball as required, but actually kicked it just before it hit the ground and got stuck in the mud as Cleal's kick had. Despite being from the country, Cleal was chosen for
City Firsts at the Sydney Cricket Ground in 1984 at a time when the annual
City vs Country game was played under residence rules. Cleal scored one of City's 7 tries as City continued their dominance with an easy 38–12 win. From 1985 Cleal would be selected for Country Firsts, playing for the team in 1985 and 1986. The annual clash was then played under Origin rules from 1987 with Cleal playing his only game for Country Origin that year, again scoring a try despite losing 30–22 at
Parramatta Stadium. Cleal played 10 Tests for Australia in 1985 and 1986. He made his test début in Game 1 of the
1985 Trans-Tasman Test series at
Lang Park in
Brisbane, scoring a try on début as Australia defeated
New Zealand 26–20. The game was noted for the spiteful clash between rival props
Greg Dowling (Australia) and
Kevin Tamati (NZ). Both had been sent to the sin-bin by French referee Julien Rascagneres, but the fight started up again on the sidelines right in front of the
Channel 9 television cameras. Cleal was moved to the bench (for the only time in his test career) for the second test at
Carlaw Park in
Auckland following the return of his club teammate Paul Vautin as Australia wrapped up the series with a 10–6 win thanks to a late
John Ribot try and conversion which got them out of gaol after looking at an embarrassing 6–4 loss. Following mass changes to the team by coach
Terry Fearnley, which included Cleal being dropped from the team, the Kiwis out classed the disjointed Australians with a resounding 18–0 win in the third test at Carlaw Park. After NSW won the
1986 State of Origin series 3-0 (the first clean sweep in Origin history), Cleal then played in all 3 tests of the
1986 Trans-Tasman Test series against New Zealand (won 3-0 by the now
Don Furner coached Aussies), before being selected for the
1986 Kangaroo Tour of Great Britain and France where he played 7 games (including one on the wing against
Halifax at
Thrum Hall) and scored 3 tries. Cleal played three more tests on the tour, including scoring two tries in Australia's 62–12 win in a pre-tour test against
Papua New Guinea in
Port Moresby, as well as the first two tests of
The Ashes series against Great Britain, both easily won by the Kangaroos 38–16 at
Old Trafford in
Manchester and 34–4 at the
Elland Road ground in
Leeds. Cleal then suffered a broken arm in a minor tour game that ended his tour. The second test against Great Britain in Leeds where his strong running resulted in his 5th test try and being named as the official Man of the Match, would prove to be Noel Cleal's final test appearance for Australia. ==Post playing==