Career
He was a dual-code rugby international and an Olympic gold medallist. A forward with the Newtown Rugby Union club in Sydney, McCue was selected on the first Wallaby tour of England in 1908–1909, the squad captained by Herbert Moran. Paddy McCue also coached the Saint George Rugby Union Club in the 1930s.
Along with fourteen of his Olympic Wallaby team-mates on his return to Australia he negotiated to take part in promotional matches against the Pioneer Kangaroos and was promptly banned from the amateur code by the Metropolitan Rugby Union.
McCue and a number of the rebels joined the Newtown club in Sydney in 1910. They included gold medallist Wallabies John "Jumbo" Barnett and Charles "Boxer" Russell.
McCue played seven seasons with Newtown and after retiring as a player was assistant coach of the University club in its inaugural first grade season of 1920. In 2008, the centenary year of rugby league in Australia, McCue was named in the Newtown Jets 18-man team of the century.
McCue was selected to represent New South Wales in 1911 and later led New South Wales as captain on the 1912-1913 tour of New Zealand.
He was selected on the 1911-1912 Kangaroo tour of Great Britain which was an Australasian squad including four New Zealanders. McCue made his international rugby league debut in the first Test of 1911 at Newcastle upon Tyne and played in all three Tests of the series, as well as in twenty other minor tour matches, scoring seven tries all told on the tour. His final international appearance was in the first test of the 1914 domestic Ashes series.