Five burning questions Origin 1 will answer

By Joe Frost / Editor

Tomorrow night sees the first match of State of Origin played for 2016, at ANZ Stadium in Sydney. Can the Maroons continue Mal Menginga’s legacy, or will the Blues show Game 3 last year was merely a hiccup?

We probably won’t know the answer to those questions until mid-July, but by the end of tomorrrow’s 80 minutes we will know…

More Origin
» Queensland will win Origin again and I couldn’t care less
» State of Origin Game 1 preview
» State of Origin teams
» No excuse for NSW come Game 1

Will Kevin Walters get ‘Ivan Henjak syndrome’?
It’s as consistent as gravity in modern sport: the coach immediately appointed to succeed a legend fails miserably.

The obvious example is Sir Alex Ferguson’s departure from Old Trafford, with Manchester United having last week appointed their third manager since the legendary Scot hung up the hairdryer.

But the bloke unlucky enough to stand in the dugout the first season after Fergie, David Moyes, didn’t even see out an entire season.

In the NRL, Wayne Bennett has left three careers in smoking ruins since he first left the Broncos at the end of 2008 – anyone want to put Ivan Henjack, Steve Price or Rick Stone in charge of a first-grade side?

Now Kevin Walters steps into the breach left by Mal Meninga, who coached the Maroons to nine Origin titles in ten years, one of the greatest records in any sport.

The fact he was the QRL’s second choice, after Cowboys mentor Paul Green turned them down, wouldn’t exactly fill those north of the Tweed with confidence. Nor would the fact Walters couldn’t even hold a successful training camp at the start of the year, with eight young players sneaking out for a few frothies and subsequently being barred from selection for 12 months.

There’s every chance this first game will be grind-it-out sort of affair, decided by a penalty or field goal. So a loss won’t necessarily tell us much about Walters’ capabilities as a mentor.

But if the Blues chalk up the kind of win they were used to when Andrew Johns was still playing, it could well be that Queensland’s famous ‘pick and stick’ policy will not apply to their coach beyond this series.

Are the Blues halves any chop?
Yes, it’s the most boring, repetitive Origin question of the last ten years, but with a rookie 7 and a 6 who last wore Blue in 2014, we once again have to ask whether NSW’s halves are up to the task.

Reynolds and Maloney are both tremendous kickers – it will be interesting to see who is thrown the tee for conversion and penalty attempts – with the former one of the competition’s best general-play kickers. A lack of attacking pressure due to poor last-tackle options plagued the Blues last year, but with these two running the show, you would think that won’t be an issue on Wednesday night.

However if you’ve had Matt Scott and Sam Thaiday running at you all night, fatigue can lead the best kicker to make some silly decisions.

Which raises the issue of whether Reynolds and Maloney will handle the defensive workload, as both are regarded as liabilities in the tackle. Of course, being a top-notch defender is not a prerequisite for being a successful Origin half – look at Johnathan Thurston.

But will NSW’s forwards ensure their halves aren’t exploited?

When does old age set in?
Queensland have had the ‘Dad’s Army’ tag applied for years now, but they have continued to make fools of the doubters.

Still, Father Time is undefeated. Eventually, even the best players get too old to perform. The smart ones have retired by then, but history is littered with athletes who held on for one season too long.

So let’s have a quick run down on some ages: Corey Parker is 34; Thurston, Cameron Smith and Cooper Cronk are all 33 this year; Nate Myles, Sam Thaiday and Matt Scott are going on 31. And 29-year-old Greg Inglis wears more strapping tape than Tutankhamun.

This child of the ’80s is hardly about to call any of them old, and modern sport science is at such a point where athletes are continuing to perform into their late 30s. But it’s not beyond the realm of possibility the famed Queensland loyalty to those who have been there and done it will one day come back to bite them, by selecting guys who can still perform for their club but are no longer up to the pace and intensity of Origin.

Has that year arrived? Honestly, I don’t think so. But it’s coming like a freight train.

Are the Blues rookies ready?
There’s a long-held belief that you either are or are not an Origin player.

Greg Bird? Made for Origin. Jamie Soward? Despite playing one very strong game in a tight series, the Penrith half is not an Origin player.

Robbie Farah? Ask Steve Roach.

NSW are about to find out whether a host of youngsters are at the start of a long career wearing blue, or are destined for the Jarrod Mullen pile.

We’ve already discussed Reynolds, who will be the 18th half since Joey Johns. Can he perform well enough to be named in Game 2? Once upon a time that wouldn’t be considered an achievement – these days it’s the best Blues fans can hope for.

It’s encouraging for the Blues that Josh Mansour and Dylan Walker have both already represented Australia, so are familiar with the rigours of top-flight representative football – and there’s certainly an argument to be made that the Kiwis are every bit as ferocious a test as the Maroons. But lining up alongside the likes of Thurston, Smith and Cronk is a very different beast to playing against them.

Matt Moylan faces probably the sternest test of all, with bombs expected to rain down on the Penrith custodian all night, with a stampeding pack Queenslanders ready to pummel him into the turf if he’s up to the task of catching the pill. He can expect to be called upon as the last line of defence throughout the night as well.

Queensland have the advantage of half as many question marks, with just two debutants.

Is Greg Inglis injured?
First, let’s just make this absolutely clear: a down-on-form Greg Inglis is still a bloke any rugby league team – probably most rugby union teams too – would be happy to have.

And, as the old saying goes, form is temporary, class is ten years of trampling New South Welshmen.

But is GI struggling to perform because his teammates at South Sydney are just a bit crap compared to their 2014 iteration, or are the suggestions he’s injured on the money?

If it’s the former, then Queenslanders need not fear. The guys he’s lining up alongside in maroon are the best in the business, and surely when he’s back in a familiar environment where everything just seems to hum along, he’ll be at his destructive best.

But if it’s the latter, then Queensland have a problem. And the fact they have selected Darius Boyd as Billy Slater’s replacement at fullback ahead of Inglis speaks volumes. Sure, they can say they believe Inglis’ best position is centre, but if that’s the case, then why was Boyd still playing on the wing and Inglis shifted to the back when Slater was injured in last year’s series?

There’s nowhere to hide in Origin, but if you do try, you’ll be found a lot sooner playing fullback than in the centres.

The Crowd Says:

2016-06-01T04:13:25+00:00

Marvel

Guest


Who can forget the H man trying to give Qld a come from behind win at home in Game 1 in 2014 in the last 5 mins to make sure the NSW game in game 2 would be key...

2016-06-01T04:10:15+00:00

Marvel

Guest


You'll probably miss the real action then

2016-05-31T20:12:55+00:00

Chris Love

Roar Guru


He had a brain fart when fielding what he thought was going to be a 40/20 and the pass back inside went astray for Lockyer to score. Hardly a Hodges debut though especially when he managed this on the now seasoned Hodges. https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=t3PhTqUP2Ts

2016-05-31T11:38:52+00:00

Kevin dustby

Guest


To compare mal to Bennett is crazy. We all know mal was not the real coach

2016-05-31T11:37:24+00:00

Kevin dustby

Guest


And mal? Wait they lost that match

2016-05-31T11:35:08+00:00

Kevin dustby

Guest


It's the only decent comment he's made this year

2016-05-31T08:16:35+00:00

Suntiger

Guest


The ref ay. Think I'll watch the play myself

2016-05-31T05:57:04+00:00

Epiquin

Roar Guru


Haha don't sell yourself so short! I should learn to look at who's commenting, rather than just the comment itself.

2016-05-31T05:51:24+00:00

Marvel

Guest


I see SOO is to go on the road again next year ostensibly because they don't want Qld to have 2 home games and maybe continue the one-sidedness and its a struggle to sell Sydney games. If NSW don't win the first game tomorrow night, then the series is virtually over so I for one will be watching the refs very closely....

2016-05-31T05:47:06+00:00

Joel

Roar Rookie


Thaiday has been in the best form he's been in for ages this season. No doubt he's nearing the end but he's not worth writing off just yet

2016-05-31T05:39:52+00:00

Benedict Arnold

Guest


It's funny that age gets thrown into the pile of excuses for performance every year. Let me say this: Paul Gallen is older than all of the blokes you mentioned. How does the oldest player on Wednesday not get a mention? Gallen is in career best form and hasn't showed any signs of age this year. I think people need to accept that all of those QLD players who are old, are most likely, going to perform like the champions they are until they decide to hang up the boots. Menzies did it, thorn did it, gallen JT and co are doing it. Leadership and experience in my opinion are still very valuable skills, better team performance sometimes can be more important than individual performance on the field. If you take the 'athlete' out of the equation and look at the unidentifiables you will notice that these old future immortals have a lot to be desired. Doing the 1%ers, making winning plays and an envious winning percentage. These blokes don't have to step down until there is someone blaringly obvious to everyone that they are better. Perhaps the best example is Justin Hodges, an absolute grub but played footy to the highest level up until he retired. He was much better in his twilight years than he was in his youth.

2016-05-31T05:30:37+00:00

Don

Roar Rookie


Mmmm... Maybe not a dead heat then. Thinking back on it Wolfman was truly awful that night. But he did score a try... By memory even Hayne's debut was pretty poor.

2016-05-31T05:18:17+00:00

Tom Rock

Expert


I am generally quite stupid, so I don't blame anyone for not seeing my tongue in cheek.

2016-05-31T05:08:02+00:00

Don

Roar Rookie


I'd add Thaiday to the potential SOO retirements this year. Either he or Myles were going to miss out this year had Napa been available. Sam has been making teams on personality rather than consistent performance for a while.

2016-05-31T05:07:52+00:00

Epiquin

Roar Guru


Wolfman's debut was by far the worst I'd ever seen. He played a few more games but never really improved. I felt bad for Merritt. Wasn't selected during his prime and looked like he was coached to come in on defense. Never got a chance to show his attacking skill because NSW were camped on their own line the whole game.

2016-05-31T05:04:44+00:00

Don

Roar Rookie


Not an advocate of Walker's selection but good players overcome bad debuts. Look at justin Hodges. His SOO debut game was just shocking. Passed twice in his own in goal for NSW tries. Next match he was really good. Darren Lockyer's test match debut was awful. 2 fumbles led to tries. Big Dell called it the worst in history. Lockyer seemed to come back OK over his further 58 tests. I reckon the worst SOO debuts seen in the last decade would be a dead heat with; Nathan Merrit - kept coming in on GI so Thurston just passed straight to Boyd instead for 2 tries. Aaron Woods - 5 runs for 38m as a starting prop and played soft as a marshmallow. David Wolfman Williams - smashed twice by Willie Tonga dropping the ball. Then the kick ahead for himself early in a set with 5 minutes to go landed straight in Boyd's hands - game and series over...

2016-05-31T04:39:16+00:00

Kaks

Roar Guru


"But that’s kind of the point – in Origin he has been at best “okay.” Yep, he has never been better than "okay". It's either terrible, okay, or somewhere in between. Glad that Reynolds has been given his chance this year, his kicking game has been sorely missed in NSW.

2016-05-31T04:34:36+00:00

Epiquin

Roar Guru


Fair call, but I've been around The Roar long enough to see far stupider ideas proposed with a straight face.

2016-05-31T04:33:26+00:00

B-Unit

Guest


Yeah, those QLDers sure are old, but they're not going to retire all at once. Maybe Parker this year, Thurston and Inglis next year, Smith and Cronk in 2018. That's a few more years of QLD series wins because if a Queensland great is retiring, they're going to send them out with a series win, just like Lockyer, Civoniceva and Hodges...

2016-05-31T04:33:08+00:00

SImon

Guest


I get the feeling that one week's sarcasm has gone over the top of a few people here..

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