Blues' dead rubber win is a cause for celebration for Queenslanders in the know

By Tim Gore / Expert

The NSW team did a celebratory lap of ANZ Stadium following their exciting last-minute win over Queensland.

Retiring captain Paul Gallen kicked the conversion as the final siren sounded, bringing the curtain down on his State of Origin career. There was fist pumping and hugging among the boys in sky blue.

I’m not sure why they were getting so carried away. They are the losers. Again.

As we were reminded when Cameron Smith was awarded the player of the Series and especially as he lifted the shield, Queensland won the State of Origin series for the tenth time in 11 years. While there can be no doubt that this Queensland side has been superb over that period, it is equally fair to say that the New South Wales sides that they have encountered have been mostly ordinary, and often garbage.

It is clearly time for massive change in the NSW ranks, but that last-minute win might fool those in charge into thinking that only minor tinkering is necessary. Winning the game gives the NSWRL hierarchy an excuse to paper over the yawning inadequacies of the team.

Ironically, the best thing that could have happened for the long-suffering Blues fans would have been to lose the final game so as to bring on a clean out.

As the Channel Nine telecast ended Queensland legend Wally Lewis was keen to talk up the Blues for 2017, as was Paul Vautin. They are hoping, with all their being, that the last-minute win will give Laurie Daley a stay of execution and that will in turn lead to the same old being rolled out against them next year.

The lopsided 12-3 penalty count went a long way to getting the Blues over the line. Perhaps referees Gerard Sutton and Ben Cummins are Queensland supporters and were trying to help NSW win, too.

The same two referees that Laurie Daley wanted removed after the 4-4 penalty count in Game 1, who then provided a 7-5 count to Queensland in Game 2, just presided over a penalty count that Barry ‘The Grasshopper’ Gommersall would have been concerned appeared biased.

A lot of Queenslanders will be blowing up about that count. However, I thought the count was pretty fair. Sutton and Cummins were in clear control of the game from start to finish and got most things right. The fact that they had the balls to sin bin Cooper Cronk and Andrew Fifita tells me that they were the right men for the job.

Not that the Nine commentators agreed. While Cooper Cronk clearly held Wade Graham back from getting to the ball in the in goal, once he was sent to the bin Andrew Johns was incredulous.

“You can’t bin a player for that! Not at this level. That’s a ridiculous decision.”

Ray Warren joined in, “It was a tough call, wasn’t it.”

No Ray, it wasn’t. It was inspired refereeing.

And was Johns actually suggesting that the higher the level of game, the less the rules should be properly enforced? By that logic by the time a Test match is played, head high tackles and squirrel grips should be just fine.

The penalty count wasn’t the only lopsided statistic in favour of the Blues. NSW had 14 more sets with the ball, which translated to over nine extra minutes possession than Queensland had. The Maroons had to make 93 more tackles.

Given these stats, the fact that NSW required a try in last minute of the game to win the match should tell those in charge at NSWRL HQ that changes must be made. The Blues should have won by at least 18 points if they were any good at all. In the last ten minutes of the first half the Blues had all the ball against twelve men and they still couldn’t get across the line.

Of course, not all of the NSW players were pedestrian. A number were quite good. The Bulldogs’ Josh Jackson was outstanding. He was superb in defence and constantly troubled the Queensland line in attack. He is my pick for the next NSW captain.

James Tedesco annoyed Blake Ferguson a few times by not passing to him, but Tedesco ran the ball 26 times for 254 metres, more than justifying his inclusion.

Josh Mansour and Wade Graham were full of running and effort. James Maloney has been solid and threatening all series and Origin 3 was no different.

Matt Moylan, after an inauspicious first half where he was targeted in defence, provided line break assists to Wade Graham and the crucial break to Blake Ferguson. Tyson Frizell was solid at lock and scored a great try.

There were few NSW players who were ordinary. Most held their own. However, Robbie Farah doing fifth tackle kicks isn’t a good plan even for the Wests Tigers. Fifita having a brain snap and getting himself binned is the action of a park footballer. While James Tamou and Aaron Woods made okay metres, you have to question how much impact they actually had on the game.

» Read The Roar’s NSW Player Ratings here for more.

At the end of the day it was a dead rubber. There aren’t many other major competitions around the world that play dead rubbers. Cricket does it in long Tests series, half just for the TV airtime.

They are only played in State of Origin because, as the series is played during the NRL season, it must be scheduled in advance. It can’t be dropped without causing chaos, and is too much of of a money-spinner for too many parties. Channel Nine pay a lot of money to get three – not two and maybe three – games each year.

This was the 16th dead rubber game that has been played over all of the 34 three game series. Queensland have won nine of those games and NSW have now won seven. Out of those 16, Origin 3 was only the fourth time that a dead rubber game has been played in Sydney.

The dead rubber does give the winning team the opportunity to humiliate their opponents by completing a clean sweep. There have been seven clean sweeps: Queensland in 1988, 1989, 1995 and 2010, and NSW in 1986, 1996 and 2000.

Queensland were hoping to add to their tally of sweeps and looked likely to do so when Darius Boyd scored with five minutes to go.

Matt Moylan put Blake Ferguson in a hole that ultimately led to Michael Jennings scoring the match winner.

The Blues went wild. So did the crowd. So did true Queensland fans.

Queenslanders in the know will be hoping that the result will mean that in 2017, rather than facing the likes of Nathan Peats, Shannon Boyd, Ryan James, Joey Leilua and Tom Trbojevic, they once more get to run out against the likes of Robbie Farah, Aaron Woods, James Tamou, Josh Dugan and Michael Jennings.

Players they’ve bested many times before and ones they’ll be confident they can best again – even though Thurston, Cronk, Thaiday, Scott, Myles, Lillyman and Smith are getting on into their thirties.

We can only hope that Daley and his selectors don’t see the dead rubber victory as an excuse to once more change nothing. If they do we might as well just give Queensland the bloody shield.

The Crowd Says:

2016-07-16T00:26:16+00:00

Bugs

Guest


Hello Pot...meet Kettle!

2016-07-16T00:15:59+00:00

Bugs

Guest


Hey Tim, Late entry into the fray here, but I agree 100%. NSW have been "building" for the last 6 years, since Ricky Stuart took over. That's a long time building. Through that time, there has been a core group, that have been there for failure after failure: Gallen, Farah, Bird, Tamou, Morris boys, Dugan, Jennings, Pearce and to a lesser extent, Beau Scott. Gal has been excellent, although his leadership probably could have been better. Brett Morris has also been excellent, but the rest have been sporadic. Other than Gal and BMoz and Jennings, I'm not sure why they've all been persisted with for so long. As a Queenslander, I worried about Jennings tearing us apart, and had him in the NSW team this year, but I think this series showed he just won't be doing that sufficiently often enough anymore to warrant continued selection. Loz does seem a little clueless. Too much of a nice guy with a connection to his players. This can be the issue with great (instinctive) players as coaches - they can fall into the trap of thinking everyone sees the game as they did/do, but his cattle just aren't as good as he was, and he seems to be failing to instruct his players sufficiently. In the post match press conference, he spoke of Qld's defence in a way that communicated he simply had no ideas about how get around / through them. As a Qld'er I'll be thrilled to see the retention of Daley et al. He spoke about the regeneration, the 8 debutants from this series, but a few were forced upon him, and some, like Dylan Walker have already been dusted. I'd be interested to see your team / squad Tim. You've nominated who'd you lose. Who would you keep and who would you bring in? Here's some tips: IN Moylan is a good'un. I missed first half of game 3, but he was good in 2nd half in unfamiliar position, and his defense was pretty good. Tedesco Mansour Jack Bird Maloney (wouldn't have done it pre-series, but he shone. Stays) Frizzell Jackson Graham Cordner UNSURE Woods Fafita Klemmer A Reynolds OUT Jennings Dugan Ferguson Bird Tamou Josh Morris Farah B Scott

2016-07-15T13:37:51+00:00

Leviathan

Roar Rookie


Aurora Borealis

2016-07-15T12:38:52+00:00

Bluey

Guest


Apparently we're not the only ones, Matthew Johns said "Pearce would make a great Origin hooker" in the DT after Origin 3 and added, "I think Pearce would find the role of dummy-half liberating. He wouldn’t need to concern himself with pushing the team around the park or thinking too much, he’d just have to get out there and go." Toovey and Andrew Johns were other halfbacks who played hooker at Origin with Johns getting a couple of MOM awards.

2016-07-15T10:39:31+00:00

Bluey

Guest


Ha ha ha very good!

2016-07-15T09:30:21+00:00

Ignoramus

Guest


It's ok Tim. It just shows how little J2 understands about league.

2016-07-15T05:49:33+00:00

David Lowe

Guest


Such typically Queensland bias comments. NSW have had to put up with crap referee's and crap decisions. So now when Qld lose all of a sudden it's the refs. to blame. Hypocrites the lot of you.

2016-07-15T04:37:20+00:00

Remo Shankar

Roar Pro


Ok, let's get specific. Moylan instead of Bird. A mountain of possession and a mountain of sideways stuff in attack. Like the previous two games, they ran out of ideas....

2016-07-15T01:17:19+00:00

Ken

Guest


joel2, I think there's a misunderstanding there. Qld didn't go out there at the start of the game pumped up with the huge gameplan of giving away heaps of penalties. It was a tactical response to the fact that their opponents had all the momentum and looked like running over them. By slowing the play right down and not giving them any space, they thought they had a better chance to hold on - regardless of how many penalties they gave away. As Tim says, it's hardly restricted to Qld. It's been happening at NRL level for a while and my belief is that it's becoming more prevalent. Possibly that's just because I'm a Saints supporter and it is used against us often as other teams do not fear us with the ball. Remove the momentum and the attack splutters.

2016-07-15T01:09:29+00:00

Ken

Guest


Not at all, actually NSW were running some pretty harmless plays. Not a major surprise, lots of new players, new combinations, a 5/8th that had never played there in NRL before. I've clearly said elsewhere that NSW created far more chances than Qld all year, but had a lower conversion rate which lost them the series.

2016-07-15T00:57:35+00:00

Leviathan

Roar Rookie


I thought the same Brian. Examining the strengths and weaknesses of both teams and the score lines in the series the prudent decision was: take the 2 when Cronk was off after the penalty was given straight in front; get possession from the restart; play through the middle then play to the QLD right side, hopefully exposing a mistake with the missing defender. There was no real overlap opportunities playing 5-10 meters out as Boyd defends as part of the line. Taking the ball back makes the game line 13 vs 11 or if Boyd plays shallow look for a 40/20.

2016-07-15T00:55:56+00:00

Ken

Guest


Don't worry about me gents, I can spot the gender of a fly at 20 paces. Here it is at 1:25:00 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xsts-l9CJUw Boyd taps it, the ball floats slowly off his hand and then changes momentum upwards as Mansours hand comes in contact with it. Clear as a non-ambiguously gendered fly.

AUTHOR

2016-07-14T23:29:44+00:00

Tim Gore

Expert


Well they did fiddle. His first senior game was in Newcastle. It got missed. Or something. But I'm as much of Queensland origin as Maroon Greg is.

2016-07-14T23:26:14+00:00

Dave_S

Guest


Me too, reminds me of Gene Miles. He'll play closer to the action eventually but wing is a good place for him to learn the trade in the meantime.

AUTHOR

2016-07-14T23:23:41+00:00

Tim Gore

Expert


I pointed it out in the article.

AUTHOR

2016-07-14T23:21:53+00:00

Tim Gore

Expert


J2, calm down dude! It's a game of footy. Sides giving away penalties to defend their line has been going on for ages, it's not just a QLD thing, it's an any side that realizes that Sin Bins are very rare thing. Smith gave away the penalty deliberately. He wanted to give away 2 not 6. Smart play. This is something I've been raising - backed up by evidence - for quite a while now. http://mobile.abc.net.au/news/2013-08-18/roosters-reaping-benefits-of-poor-discipline/4894862 I'm not picking on QLD. In this instance I was picking on NSW for having all the possession vs 12 men and still not scoring!

2016-07-14T22:23:01+00:00

S T Ruggling

Roar Pro


Yes and QLD conducted themselves with such humility, if this is how they carry on after a dead rubber loss imagine what they will be like when they lose a series

2016-07-14T21:46:06+00:00

db

Guest


There's daylight between the finger and the ball. The movement of the finger is caused by the contact of Boyd's forearm on the defender's finger. The photo proves the decision to award the try was correct.

2016-07-14T14:46:25+00:00

The eye

Guest


The coach is crook,the wingers cant play,the centres are hopeless,the halves cant tackle..the captain is despised almost as much as the vice captain,the props are soft and the bench are over rated..and this is what the Blues own supporters think ! With a squad this talentless who'd have thought they'd just smacked the best team in the world ?

2016-07-14T10:45:06+00:00

Renegade

Roar Guru


Thank god grubs like Parker are gone as well.... the cheating grubs up north might actually be respected next year. Just need to get rid of Thaiday, McGuire and Boyd as well now.

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