Queensland's player ratings for the 2014 Origin series

By Dane Eldridge / Expert

Residents of Brisbane can now safely walk Caxton St again after Queensland saved face and widespread rioting with a consolation 32-8 win in the final game of the 2014 Origin series.

Here is the rundown for every player that wore the famous Maroon for this year’s tilt at glory and a rating for their overall performance across the three games.

Check out The Roar’s NSW player ratings

Billy Slater – 8
He’s back! Or did he ever leave? I’m confused. Either way, despite a banged-up chassis and the engulfing shadow of Jarryd Hayne, the Innisfail slasher dripped with class in another sterling series for his state.

Darius Boyd – 6
Kicked off the series playing club footy like he was on the breadline. By the end, was back to somewhere close to his brash and bouncy best. All except for the beard, which makes him look like he’s still on the breadline.

Greg Inglis – 7
Let’s be honest, this guy failed us. He didn’t dazzle us with spades of unbelievable magic, he didn’t produce superhuman flair, he didn’t humiliate his opponents with astonishing highlights and he didn’t even cure world hunger – until Game 3 when he electrified everyone.

Justin Hodges – 6
The old bloke clocked-on for his usual shift: stealing dummy half runs, fending blokes in the lips, getting up in some grills and all the while, still running his free life advice sessions for his opponents. Not his barn-burning best, but still multi-faceted.

Brent Tate – 5
While one of the preferred piñatas for Blues fans over the years, nobody wishes him anything but a speedy healing after another gut-wrenching knee injury finished him in game two. Workmanlike in his two appearances.

Will Chambers – 4
Featured in the final game and gave a frisky return in a high-octane first half. Someone must have stolen his hat.

Johnathan Thurston – 5
By his lofty standards, the champion playmaker won’t be fast-tracking this series in to his scrapbook- in fact, he would probably prefer to use the newspaper clippings to create a bonfire for a Josh Reynolds effigy.

Cooper Cronk – 6
Rushed back from a broken forearm sustained in Game 1 to give Queensland direction and Craig Bellamy an ulcer. Made the miraculous recovery using ‘potions and lotions’ – something I believe he scored from the Essendon club doctor.

Daly Cherry-Evans – 6
The Manly halfback comes across as one of those pleasant and gentle-natured fellows who would probably save a kitten from the middle of a roaring freeway. Therefore, it hurts me to say this – while he did his best on one leg, he just couldn’t nail his Cooper impersonation in Game 2 when it was most needed.

Matt Scott – 6
The robust bopper disappeared after coming a gutser in Sydney but when he was around, he was his usual bullish presence. Continues to show he’s more country-tough than a rum-varnished bumper bar covered in B+S Ball stickers.

Cameron Smith – 7
Still better than Robbie Farah and cemented his supremacy with a dour 1-0 series victory in the head-to-head meat pie count. Despite being on the losing side, it was another series where he was the ultimate league gentleman – eloquent with officialdom, stylish with creativity and discreet with knees.

Nate Myles – 9
What more can you say about this leviathan? With his tireless work ethic and land-clearing scone, he is now the premier cornerpiece of the Maroons pack. An unbreakable force across the three games who constantly vended the pain for free.

Aiden Guerra – 7
Good on ya, fella. By showing you can competently make the step from club to interstate level, you’re officially part of Queensland’s Generation Next. Take your place alongside Cherry-Evans, Matt Gillett, Chris McQueen and Justin Hodges.

Matt Gillett – 6
Let’s look at this guy’s pet play. If you freeze it here on the telestrator, you’ll see that people still don’t know how to correctly pronounce his name. Still smoothing the edges of his game, however kept putting his hand up for the dirty work right throughout the series.

Sam Thaiday – 6
His beefy charges were sorely missed in Game 1 and he went within a bee’s of scoring what would’ve surely been the clincher in Sydney. There’s no doubting that he adds punch, flair and an extra man to any two-man brouhaha.

Corey Parker – 7
The Benjamin Button of the Maroons who plays the valuable role of invisible janitor around the ruck and unsung metre-maker combined. For an oldie, you know the saying – he’s red wine, and he was sorely missed in game two.

Jacob Lillyman – 5
Came in to camp for two games and did the job requested of him by coach Meninga. Made more than 10 hit-ups and 15 tackles per game and played anything by Willie Nelson on request around the campfire.

Ben Te’o – 6
Does anyone know what this bloke is doing next year? Some say his agent has been advised to find a club that is ‘nowhere in range of any ginger journos’, so I guess the NRL and Scotland are off the list. It’s unfortunate, as his spice off the bench would certainly be welcomed back again.

Chris McQueen – 4
Quiet in his two games played after setting a high standard with an impressive debut in 2013. Nonetheless, was eventually granted a chunkified contract upgrade by Souths last week after much wrangling, so he’ll be reflecting on his efforts from a nice place – like a higher tax bracket.

Dave Taylor – 4
Once again, maligned by Maroons fans and loved by the Blues. So in response to being blamed for everything from an unfulfilled Origin career to the demise of Brazilian soccer, he’s already pulled out the trump card of threatening to defect to rugby.

Josh Papalii – 4
Only featured in Game 1 after succumbing to an ankle injury, however captured the hearts and minds of a state in the match when he attempted a rare bifurcation of Paul Gallen.

The Crowd Says:

2014-07-11T01:40:55+00:00

Hoy

Roar Guru


Harsh on Inglis. I think they used him very wrongly this year, trying to give his short balls all series, and hoping he can bash and barge over. When he got it with space, he was at his usual standard, running, palming, creating... But for the first two games, QLD were off. I tell you what... Cronk not injured, and NSW would be looking at 9 straight losses. I have no doubt of that. QLD were doing it easy for the first 10 minutes of game one (small sample I konw), and then he got injured, and they struggled for the rest until Wednseday when he came back. All of a sudden, repeat sets, structure, good attack. DCE was thrown to the wolves when they didn't train with him at half for the first game, and then he was only on one leg for the second, but Cronk? He is obviously integral to the attack.

2014-07-11T01:13:57+00:00

Cowboys

Guest


Why does everyone jump to this conclusion, there are 16 other players on field that need to stand up and take responsibility. Why? Because he plays 5/8, and should be playing halfback. 5/8 only gets the ball, tackle 5 or 6 to set up scoring opportunities or repeat sets. were as a halfback usually gets the ball tackle 1-4 and controls and moves the team around. He is like benji when at the Tigers, without another quality halfback to lead the team to good field possession, benji had to take on directing and being the main source of attack. if there is only one person doing this in a team, other teams wake up to it and only target that one person. simply. JT is leading the team and then getting thrown the ball to come up with a 'miracle' play at the end. He can't touch the ball five times in a set and produce the goods every time. As a Cowboys supporter, they need him back at halfback to lead and set up field position, he plays whats in front of him and will have more opportunities to attack by not being predictable thrown the ball on the last.

2014-07-10T13:12:30+00:00

Phill

Guest


You guys know his got a new born yea. Clinical against the Blues last night, could of easily received man of the match again. Made the Blues halves look like reserve graders.

2014-07-10T06:17:39+00:00

KevC

Guest


And if there had been a winger outside Taylor rather than McQueen.

2014-07-10T06:16:44+00:00

KevC

Guest


As a Cowboys supporter that's not easy to hear Jack but it might actually be on the money. JT corrals a lot of the salary cap and the results haven't been forthcoming.

2014-07-10T06:14:57+00:00

KevC

Guest


That'd be because the winning NSW halves weren't very good.

2014-07-10T05:59:19+00:00

ShmaxShmillas

Roar Rookie


I would love to see what the series would have turned out like if Gillett held the ball more. It's called ball security and with it you retain possession and win games.

2014-07-10T02:47:32+00:00

Scrubbit

Guest


Not to be a stickler but hodges had a far better series than Inglis. Inglis threatened for half a half of footy while hodges was highly involved in all three games.

2014-07-10T02:05:09+00:00

Jack Henry

Guest


I'm a Blue, so grain of salt and all that, but I think guys like Lockyer, Smtih and Cronk have been covering for Thurston a bit over the past 8 series. Yeah, he's had his MOTM awards and all the rest of it - not saying he's a dud player. What I actually am saying, rather, is that a lot of what we saw over the past 3 games from Thurston has actually happened numerous times during the past 8 years...but has been glossed over as results speak for themselves. The number of times I marvelled at several "analysts" glossing over the number of times in a game he would die with the ball on the fifth...overrunn his blocks..confuse his outside supports...the list goes on. He's brilliant, devastatingly so, but he's also very - very - error prone. And there's the fact that he's been the central playmaker at one of the NRL's perenially underacheiving teams for quite a while now. Anyway, congrats Qld on a deserved win, for what it's worth.

2014-07-10T00:23:37+00:00

MAX

Guest


Coop is money in the bank and I bet (treble) accordingly. I rated him at 9. Corey Parker played the game of his life. An easy 9 and deserved MOM. Coach Daley looked as though he knew the futility of the future. Good 10

2014-07-09T23:47:35+00:00

Don

Roar Rookie


A bit harsh. One bad series in 9 and he gets the punt? I would say Cherry Evans just wouldn't throw half the cut out / face passes JT does that have put Boyd over the line so many times. It's not DCE's strength and yet it has been critical in most series wins for QLD. DCE brings something different to the party but as long as JT is fit he should start. He looks injured and struggling to kick long and accelerate into a gap.

2014-07-09T23:22:23+00:00

Benedict Arnold

Guest


Jt had a shocking series. Personally, I'd rather the halves combo be cronk and cherry evans.

2014-07-09T21:39:29+00:00

Squidward

Roar Rookie


I think you've skewed the Queensland ratings much higher. Perhaps on bias or rosey coloured glasses from last night. But people like teo, McQueen and espesh Dave taylor getting too high 4s and 5s. Just below the winning nsw halves

2014-07-09T21:21:43+00:00

Kowalski

Roar Rookie


These rating average across for each 3 games of the series mate. I'd say it's fairly accurate. Scores would be higher of course if it was reflecting last nights performance. (Albeit Chambers only had 1 game and I thought his debut was wonderful)

2014-07-09T20:59:51+00:00

The Koomz

Guest


Inglis 7?????? U must be sleeping!!!

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