State of Origin is the premier Australian sporting event

By James Cairns / Roar Guru

Much has been written on the State of Origin series in 2014. Every man, woman and their varied pets have thrown in their two cents about the great contest.

Opinions are important, they form the mediated public sphere that is the sporting universe and drive interest and passion for sport. I love to write opinion pieces.

But all these pieces come from basically a few token story-lines, often on the same topic, contributing to the hype that surrounds many sporting events.

But Origin isn’t any sporting event. This is the sporting event.

Strip down the hysteria and uncompromising media hype that surrounds each game and you can begin to appreciate what a special cultural phenomenon we have. State of Origin is exceptional.

I know I am not alone when I say that, to a league fan, Origin time is the most wonderful time of the year. It brings out an unrelenting beast in those who follow it, a passion so true it infects your blood stream, your consciousness.

You think about it almost every second the weeks leading up to it, you see a Queensland license plate on a Sydney Motorway and you boo them from behind your steering wheel. You fantasise about Cameron Smith lying on the ground in despair and Darius Boyd with tears streaming down his face.

I’m a New South Welshman, in case you couldn’t tell.

But Origin transcends the passionate Queenslander or the die-hard New South Welshman, it becomes one of the highlights on the cultural calendar. People who wouldn’t give a second thought about the Titans versus Panthers on Saturday Night, turn on their TVs at 7:30pm on a Wednesday, huddled around with their family or friends.

The most important sporting events capture the casual, they grab the indifferent individual and yell, “you must watch me”.

It is just like the situation where people who do not usually follow or particularly care about football, such as myself, are now eagerly anticipating the World Cup.

State of Origin 1 on May 28th attracted a whopping 4.058 million viewers, it was the most-watched television event in 2014 and was one of the most-watched Origins ever. It broke records for Adelaide audience (4 per cent increase, 86 000), Victorian regional audience (10 per cent increase, 118 083) and a huge Perth audience increase (71 per cent 109 000).

Regardless of whether you have already seen these stats, they impressively demonstrate the importance and prevalence of Origin.

On social media, Origin was being talked about in 104 countries, hashtags related to the game trended globally and tweets about the game exceeded 100,000.

I hear the arguments, rugby league is a sport dominated by two states, New South Wales and Queensland. The AFL has a broader reach, with a following that covers a larger portion of the country.

But AFL, rugby union and the A-League all do not have an event that so well encapsulates the essence of its nature and epitomises for the masses, which is what makes any sport great.

State of Origin rarely disappoints, almost every game is a spectacle to behold, a superlative showcase of sport. Last Wednesday night, the 100th game since it’s inception, was a brutal and unbelievably tough clash, that displayed Origin grit at its most beautiful.

What’s perfect about State of Origin is hard to define. What is the element that creates the Origin magic. Is it the grit? The skill? The competition? The rivalry? Who knows.

But whatever it may be, State of Origin has an indistinguishable quality that has brought it to the apex of Australian sport and culture. If we continue to speculate about its downfalls and the inconveniences of it’s scheduling, and if anything eventuates, we risk interfering with what makes Origin special.

The thought of anything but the State of Origin spectacle we know today is unbearable. So let’s appreciate what we have now, the premier sporting event in the country.

The Crowd Says:

2014-06-06T03:30:13+00:00

Cathar Treize

Roar Guru


Boy, 426,000 TV viewers in Melbourne, 118,000 in Vic country, 100,000 plus in Perth, and origin's on the wane? One of your better troll posts In brief :)

2014-06-06T02:59:54+00:00

code 13

Roar Guru


Well I actually have the numbers for every pro Australian and New Zealand football club including the national teams. However as the article is about Australia you can see I didn't include the Kiwis numbers either. I only listed the Crusaders simply because they had the highest for any Aus/Nz super rugby team. The 5 Australian Super Rugby teams are much lower.

2014-06-05T07:17:14+00:00

Pete

Guest


Then why did you give the numbers for the Crusaders?

2014-06-05T03:06:14+00:00

code 13

Roar Guru


True but I think the word AUSTRALIAN in the article headline may have escaped you...

2014-06-05T01:59:27+00:00

Crosscoder

Roar Guru


It seems to me In Brief ,you have just arrived on planet earth or have woken from a deep slumber..Check the comments by some AFL eg Lyon,Newman,Whately et al. And of course the record TV ratings.Seen better days LOL. Full moon rising ?

2014-06-05T01:56:28+00:00

Crosscoder

Roar Guru


It's called committment Tad,perhaps a lesson for another code .

AUTHOR

2014-06-04T23:57:30+00:00

James Cairns

Roar Guru


Sorry, can't agree. Last year was a record TV rating, then this year beat that again. Games in NSW consistently get over 80,000 crowds. Game 2 will be a sell out. It is on the rise.

2014-06-04T22:05:46+00:00

Dogs Of War

Roar Guru


In the 80's when we couldn't even sell out the SFS for NSW home games? You must be a QLD'er

2014-06-04T19:39:19+00:00

Pete

Guest


Facebook numbers: The All Blacks - 2,714,986 (GLOBAL brand)

2014-06-04T12:30:12+00:00

peeeko

Roar Guru


thats why the last match had the biggest TV ratings ever

2014-06-04T12:17:58+00:00

In Brief

Guest


It seems to be me like interest in orgin is on the wane. I also don't see the whole of community engagement there was in the 80s when there were origin parties on every corner. Of course it's still big, but has seen better days.

AUTHOR

2014-06-04T11:49:24+00:00

James Cairns

Roar Guru


Wowwww that's very very crap, sorry to hear you don't have access to it. at least they have brought in the NRL pass, which I think you can watch the games live on.

2014-06-04T09:59:59+00:00

code 13

Roar Guru


I agree James. 9 million daily & 12 million monthly Australian users. I always find it strange when people criticise the worth of social media platforms (like Facebook) on social media platforms (like the Roar)..

2014-06-04T09:15:44+00:00

fiver

Guest


Broncos had 400 at the beginning of this year, they will have 500k very soon.

2014-06-04T07:51:25+00:00

MAX

Guest


Onya JC, We reside in Adelaide and Gyngell gave us Friday nights NRL on GEM, then pulled it, purportedly on the grounds that it did not rate. Ch 9 now shows ancient movies and or soapies in that slot. It is particularly tough when we miss Canterbury LIVE in action. I understand there are > 15,000 NRL fans in our town. It is a serious case of inflicting mental cruelty upon Australians who don't live on the Eastern seaboard. Together Forever, MAX

2014-06-04T07:01:38+00:00

Tad

Roar Rookie


I love SOO, there is nothing better than watching RL players beat the living suitcase out of each other, it's a lot of fun.

AUTHOR

2014-06-04T06:49:10+00:00

James Cairns

Roar Guru


i agree, or just being handled by a different network. fox sports coverage of NRL is excellent, if the people working on it there, could be lured to free to air, id love it.

AUTHOR

2014-06-04T06:48:10+00:00

James Cairns

Roar Guru


Hahah thank you Max, so is yours. Ive heard that point of view quite a lot, and i understand it. I remember a lot of stir among dogs fans about our halves being injured potentially. For me, SOO is more important than the rounds it interferes with, just imagine how hodkinson and reynolds will come back to the team afterwards? I think it would improve membership, as it builds interest in the game. I dream of a Channel Nine free NRL, they care more about the dollars than the great game, it's a shame.

2014-06-04T05:01:14+00:00

up in the north

Guest


I would love to see the NRL have their own TV channel.

2014-06-04T04:41:21+00:00

MAX

Guest


JC, your club membership selection is immaculate. As a Canterbury member I regard Origin as interesting exhibition of Rugby League skills and courage at the highest level but always at an unresolvable placement on the calendar. Club football will always hold top priority on my sporting diary. Interesting to see how two men with same club loyalties can differ on their opinion of Origin. It would also be interesting to see how many fans are influenced to join RLFC's because of exposure to Origin and also intra club thinking. When selection to Origin can be rejected without penalty and clubs paid an amount equal to total match payments of the players selected I may change. But, it is imperative that the NRL develops its own TV channel and preferably be free of Gyngell and Murdoch.

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