Career
Educated at Sydney Boys High School, graduating in 1957, where he played 2nd XV for the school where he played alongside former Canterbury-Bankstown Bulldogs and Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks player George Taylforth and Saint George Dragons halfback George Evans. He coached Sydney club Randwick to four Sydney championship wins before becoming Australia"s national team coach. He coached Australia from 1982-1983, and again from 1988.
He coached Australia to victory at the 1991 Rugby World Cup.
Dwyer moved to Leicester Tigers after the game turned professional in 1996 and replaced Chalkie White. The club"s board decided to replace Dwyer with former club captain Dean Richards.
In 1998 Dwyer was appointed head coach of recently relegated Bristol Rugby. Under him the club returned to the Premiership at the first time of asking.
In 2000, Dwyer left Bristol after changes to the club"s back room staff
In his time at Bristol Dwyer was a forceful advocate for the club"s potential to be the leading light in English rugby, "the potential here is greater than in any other rugby city in England, including Leicester". In 2001 Dwyer returned to Australia and became coach of the New South Wales Waratahs in Super Rugby (at the time known as Super 12). He led the Waratahs to an eighth-place finish in 2001 and their first semi-final in the competition in 2002.
He resigned in 2003 after a fifth-place finish but stayed with the New South Wales union as a development officer
In 2011, he was inducted into the Institutional Review Board Hall of Fame, alongside all other Rugby World Cup-winning head coaches and captains through the 2007 edition He has written two autobiographies - The Winning Way (1992) and Full Time: A coach"s Memoirs (2004).
Dwyer survived a heart attack in 2013.