NSW Origin celebration all at sea

By Ben Horne / Roar Guru

A sea – or rather a harbour of blue greeted Laurie Daley and Paul Gallen on Thursday at the Opera House. But where were all the NSW fans?

That precious State of Origin shield – which Gallen revealed he slept with on Wednesday night – is finally back in Sydney after eight years north of the border.

Last month at ANZ Stadium, a heaving crowd of 83,421 cheered as NSW clinched the series.

But at a celebration event to mark the seismic shift in rugby league power at Circular Quay, there were less than 300 people in attendance.

It was school holidays and the sun was shining.

The same catwalk and platform that staged Australia’s Ashes winning cricketers in January was set.

There was an abundance of blue wigs being handed out – yet a distinct lack of heads there to wear them.

Queenslanders will no doubt claim the modest turnout as proof that they still hold a mortgage over State of Origin passion, despite their dynasty coming to an end on the field.

But the question is, did Blues fans even know the event was on?

Details were only made public less than 24 hours before the tribute, even though NSW clinched the series way back on June 18.

That’s hardly enough notice for families to find their way into the city and “thank the team” as the media release stated.

Jarryd Hayne was taking “selfies” with the crowd, and all other Sydney-based players – and their affable coach Daley – were happy to sign autographs and take time talking to their loyal supporters.

But the players deserved more and fans deserved a better atmosphere – just like at Suncorp Stadium on Wednesday night when Gallen lifted the Origin shield to a half-empty stadium and a chorus of boos from the partisan Maroons’ crowd.

Common sense tells you he should have been allowed to show off the shield at ANZ Stadium on June 18, when those 83,421 Blues fans were cheering the house down.

Perhaps this civic reception hosted by NSW Premier Mike Baird would also have been better staged in the immediate aftermath of the win in Sydney, when emotions were still running high.

NRL chief executive Dave Smith described Origin on Thursday as a “phenomenon” with nation-wide interest skyrocketing this year.

In that vein, the public celebration was a fine initiative by the game.

But timing and promotion was all at sea.

The Crowd Says:

2014-07-13T12:53:06+00:00

Leaguecoach101

Guest


Funny how the self respecting NSW Blues fans managed to snap up over 80,000 tickets to ANZ Stadium last year to watch their team play - twice. Yet the passionate Maroons fans struggled to sell out Suncorp even once this year - with 30,000 less seats....

2014-07-11T08:02:03+00:00

Scrubbit

Guest


That first sentence. Absolute gold lol.

2014-07-10T23:11:23+00:00

Pedro the Maroon

Guest


Of course you faied to mention that no self-respecting kid would want to shake the hand of Gallen, Wood, Bird or Reynolds. There's a few player sin the Blues squad who seem nice enough but the ringleaders of the niggle and the non-stop forearms to the head (hilarious watching Gallen strike a prone Nate Myles in the head while at the same time whinging to the ref about the elbow to the throat of "Diver" Bird). DId you see Thurston's face after he almost scored? He copped facial massages from at least three Blues in the melle they called a tackle? Dirty play won them a series but not the hearts and minds of the fans. Good luck tho the Blues and congratulations - but next year I hope they try to actually play some footie.

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