The Liebke Ratings: State of Origin Game III

By Dan Liebke / Expert

Heading into the final State of Origin for 2016, Queensland knew that they had already won the series.

Of course, if you switched the two teams’ players, it would be instead New South Wales who’d have the remarkable winning record over the past decade.

It seems strange then to put so much emphasis on what is effectively a coin toss of where you were born or where you played your first senior game or whatever criterion it is that applies to Greg Inglis.

Nevertheless, here are the ratings from the first State of Origin.

The nature of evil
Grade: D

Channel Nine bombarded viewers with their usual pre-game hype. Lots of that talk this time around was about the nature of dead rubbers and what motivated teams to win such games.

In the dressing rooms, Billy Slater assured viewers that Queensland weren’t content with all the success they’ve had so far and reaffirmed that they desperately wanted to win this match too.

Which raised the obvious question of what could possibly cause such immense, insatiable yearning? Is it the vast emptiness so obviously tearing at the very fibre of their soulless existence? Or are the men from North of the Tweed merely consumed with such gluttony that they are the most criminally sinful sporting team of all time, destined to live forever in infamy?

The answer became clear during the national anthem, which was held relatively early, despite Andrew Johns’ threat that he could happily watch a replay of Johnathan Thurston setting up a try for hours and hours.

During the anthem, Cameron Smith could clearly be seen instead singing words from ‘Mein Kampf’, while several of his Maroon teammates ended the performance with a hearty ‘Heil Hydra!’

So, relentlessly evil it is, then.

James Tedesco
Grade: A

Against Queensland’s sinful wickedness stood James Tedesco, the young fullback destined to lead New South Wales out of the darkness of the last decade like a shining beacon of hype.

Before the game, Brad Fittler breathlessly explained the deadly unpredictability of Tedesco, pointing out that sometimes he will run and pass the ball, whereas on other occasions he will run and not pass the ball.

Not that any of that helped when Queensland effortlessly opened the scoring via Inglis after an overlap formed on the left following Josh Dugan’s decision to wander off and hunt a Pokemon.

Penalties
Grade: B+

New South Wales hit back in the 23rd minute with a try to Tyson Frizell, who for the second time in as many matches, utilised the often misunderstood tactic of running towards the try line and putting the ball down over it. The rest of his team had no interest in Frizell’s madcap theories, though, and Queensland spent the rest of the half heroically defending their line from wave after wave of bumbling Blues attack.

Queensland ended up conceding nine penalties in the first half, along with Cooper Cronk being sent to the sin bin for, I dunno, passing notes in class? Had New South Wales merely had the foresight to bring 1980s sharpshooter Ross Conlon out of retirement for this game, they could have gone to the break twenty points ahead. Instead, they had to settle for a mere 6-4 lead.

As the teams trudged off at halftime, Brad Fittler hilariously asked James Maloney what the key was for the Blues to break the Queensland defence. As if the New South Wales halfback had the faintest clue.

Michael Jennings
Grade: F

After a halftime break that saw rugby league Immortals Andrew Johns and Wally Lewis battle with swords to take the other’s head and win The Prize, New South Wales finally secured another try via Andrew Fifita to take the lead out to 12-4.

There was some contention from the pocket referee – or Cameron Smith as he prefers to be called – that Michael Jennings had been in an offside position when the try was scored. But he was overruled by The Bunker, who decided that Jennings hadn’t had any impact on the play. A harsh call from the video referees, but we’ve all been witness to Jennings’ Origin career and we all know in our hearts that it’s true.

Soft sin bins
Grade: B-

Queensland rallied yet again, bringing the score back to 12-10 after Gavin Cooper scored out wide. Fifita was then sin-binned after a post-try scuffle broke out.

Most viewers agreed it was a harsh call from the referees to bin Fifita. Why, it’s almost as if you can’t run in from the other side of the field and try to tear a Queenslander’s head off from behind any more. I mean, Fifita can’t be expected to just disappear!

Despite the sin-binning, New South Wales somehow maintained their lead while Fifita was off the field and went into the last ten minutes two points ahead.

Until, as always, Queensland scored via Darius Boyd with just five minutes remaining to give them the match and the whitewash.

Congratulations, Queensland. Deserving 3-0 victors.

Flipping the script
Grade: A

Except, wait a moment. What was this? Suddenly, with just two minutes left on the clock now, it was New South Wales who went the length of the field, with Tedesco – hallowed be His name – pulled down agonisingly short of the try line. And then Jennings straightened and scored the actual match-winning try, primarily to shove it in the face of those snooty Bunker critics from earlier in the half.

Gallen converted the try to finish his career. Aaron Woods celebrated by high-fiving nobody at all. And New South Wales went mad celebrating a 1-2 series victory that will surely never be forgotten.

The Crowd Says:

2016-07-15T02:44:11+00:00

Leviathan

Roar Rookie


Probably a Zubat at that time of night

2016-07-14T22:20:15+00:00

steveng

Roar Rookie


Its about time he did something and if he didn't score the try, what and how would you rate him?

2016-07-14T08:23:04+00:00

Brian George

Guest


Ah yes, Tedesco would be our choice over a couple others - you though would be a walk up start curaeus

2016-07-14T07:43:12+00:00

Alex L

Roar Rookie


He actually did have a line break, albeit entirely because QLD went to sleep on the inside of Maloney.

2016-07-14T07:39:44+00:00

balanced

Guest


I too can't believe the wraps Tedesco got for last night. I think people see what they want to see. He didn't play badly, but he didn't really prove anything one way or the other in his debut. His stats show a lot of metres, but that was because he was given the ball in open space on two occasions, once when Moylan put Jackson into a hole and once when Moylan put Ferguson into the hole at the end. Any winger or full back would pick up big metres if they are given the ball in space, so the credit should actually be to Moylan for putting runners into the gaps. Tedesco didn't break the line once, wasn't tested under the bomb, and he made a couple of errors - the one where he threw the ball behind Ferguson early on, and the one in the 2H where he took the quick tap on the 20m restart and didn't see Moylan in support in clear space. So the idea that Tedesco had a great game is an exaggeration. He did what would have been the minimum expected, nothing more, nothing less. But he deserved the spot on club form, and didn't do anything wrong to say he shouldn't be there next time.

2016-07-14T06:06:55+00:00

Big Steve

Guest


pocket referee, classic. nearly as good as some of your ben stokes stuff.

2016-07-14T05:46:19+00:00

Dean - Surry Hills

Guest


+1

2016-07-14T05:12:35+00:00

johnnyball

Guest


Poor old Jennings, scores winning try and team ignores him as they go into hysterical raptures.

2016-07-14T03:39:19+00:00

DB

Guest


-- Comment from The Roar's iPhone app.

2016-07-14T03:39:16+00:00

DB

Guest


Always a good laugh Dan! -- Comment from The Roar's iPhone app.

2016-07-14T02:36:55+00:00

Ken

Guest


That second paragraph in the Jennings section - the pocket referee and Jennings impact on the play - was some of your best Dan.

2016-07-14T02:33:07+00:00

matth

Guest


I believe this may have been your best yet, well done.

2016-07-14T00:50:13+00:00

Armchair expert

Guest


Finally, a true, unbiased account of proceedings. Tedesco, hallowed be thy name, looked like he was running in a sandpit that last 20 metres. Jennings getting involved....pfft.

2016-07-14T00:36:52+00:00

JohnB

Guest


Fittler was probably just being sarcastic with Moloney

2016-07-13T23:32:35+00:00

Emcie

Roar Guru


Better not have been another bloody Ratata

2016-07-13T23:20:35+00:00

Emcie

Roar Guru


I am a qld supporter mate

2016-07-13T23:09:20+00:00

Lancey5times

Guest


Jennings 'no impact on the play' is a humdinger. I've heard there was also a Pokemon inside the 10 for Fifita's try

2016-07-13T23:07:18+00:00

curaeus

Guest


Ask the Toads who they'd rather see at fullback for NSW. It certainly ain't Tedesco!

2016-07-13T22:47:01+00:00

Jaime O'Donnell

Guest


I'm with you Emcie, on three seperate occaisions NSW had on overlap on the left and each time Teddy decided to take step inside and not utilise the overlap. School boy stuff, draw and pass. Not good enough in this areana IMO

2016-07-13T22:28:36+00:00

Emcie

Roar Guru


Gotta say, I'm surprised at how much praise Tedesco is getting. He made meters, but what did he do with the ball? I thought Moylan looked much more dangerous at fullback

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