Queensland’s preferred Blues line-up

By Emcie / Roar Guru

Well here we are, nine rounds in and already the football is starting to distract from the true purpose of the early season – providing context to present fans their preferred NSW Blues line-up for Game 1 of State of Origin.

However, it has come to my attention that over the many years of this long and storied tradition, one perspective has been horribly under-represented.

So I’ve taken it upon myself to right this wrong by presenting Queensland’s preferred Blues line-up.

Now, the title is pretty self-explanatory: this line-up represents the squad that this particular Queensland fan would prefer to see the Maroons take on in Melbourne.

While it would be easy to name a team full of nobodies, I’ve limited myself to picking players that have either played Origin before or are currently in the conversation, so there’s at least an element of legitimacy to the team.

With the team featuring genuine rep players, benefit to Queensland will have to come from the overall composition and gameplan, much like its real-world equivalent.

So what gameplan should these selections revolve around? If there’s one thing Queenslanders love seeing more then anything else from their opposition, it’s one-out hit ups, so that should be promoted, with sweeping back-line plays and second-phase footy to be heavily discouraged.

This priority on one-out hit ups should see wingers only getting the ball inside the attacking 20-metre zone so the defence aren’t asked too many questions. Therefore, selections in the back line should prioritise ball runners over ball players.

Ball runners tend to accumulate impressive highlights packages which should make these selections more palatable to the southern public while helping to gloss over any deficiencies.

Trying to select forwards is a tougher prospect, thanks to the quality the Blues enjoy. So what don’t the Maroons want to see? Well for one thing, big, explosive forwards busting through the line is a big no-no, especially with a selection of ball-running backs coming through with support. So selection will have to drift towards forwards that lay a platform, rather than create opportunities themselves, starving the back-line of the broken play that really showcases their skills.

An abundance of defensive workhorses available to NSW also presents the opportunity to oversaturate the backrow with 80-minute toilers, ensuring that effectively utilising the bench remains an issue for the coaching staff.

So it’s all structure, structure, structure, and Cameron Smith and his friends eat that kind of thing for breakfast. Perfect.

With the guiding principles now in place it’s time to jump into the selections themselves.

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1. Will Hopoate
I was originally considering keeping the incumbent, James Tedesco – seeing as he meets the criteria of a ball runner with a healthy disregard for passing – until I noticed Hopoate still played.

If you were to describe Will as a fullback, words like ‘safe’, ‘dependable’ and ‘defensive’ are thrown around – all the polar opposite of ‘dangerous’.

Now sure, you might think that Hopoate is capable of passing, but this should be alleviated somewhat by the difference in pace between him and his wingers, meaning that by the time he’s in a position to pass, his outside men should be well downfield.

So there you have it, NSW’s Darius Boyd takes out the first spot.

2. Josh Addo-Carr
Queensland won’t exactly be happy lining up against this guy, but let’s be honest, he’s done just about everything you can to earn a spot and thoroughly deserves selection.

Plus, everything going to plan, he won’t see the ball outside of kick returns anyway, taking away the danger he brings in broken play and attacking from mid-field.

NSW’s traditional gameplan of wingers rushing up on Greg Inglis and making Boyd look good should also see his impact mitigated.

3. Josh Dugan
This couldn’t have worked out better – he’s a ball runner, allergic to passing, and the current incumbent!

Sure, he’s got a broken foot, but in the time-honoured Origin tradition, I’ll give him every opportunity to prove his fitness.

AAP Image/Dan Himbrechts

4. Blake Ferguson
With favourite picks Jaryd Hayne and Michael Jennings out of the equation – due to injury and commitment to Tonga, respectively – it was time to take the search a bit left of field (well, technically right of field).

After losing his spot to Addo-Carr it became quickly apparent that Ferguson’s offloads were far too important to Queensland’s gameplan to drop him out of the squad entirely and the opening at left centre seemed a perfect fit.

Picking a player out of position and on the opposite side of the field may seem doubtful but is entirely plausible when referring to Blues selections.

5. James Tedesco
After narrowly missing out on the fullback role, Tedesco’s perfect fit into the all-running, no-passing backline ethos made him too good a proposition to pass up and subsequently he earns himself a spot on the wing.

The dangerous abilities that saw him miss out on the fullback role should be well contained on the wing, where his role will be confined to returning kicks into set defensive lines and being bundled out of touch five metres out from the Maroons’ goalline.

6. Matt Moylan
With first-choice James Maloney no longer giving the amount of penalties that once made him so attractive to Queensland supporters, it seemed fitting to give this spot to the guy who replaced him at the Sharks, with the difference between their respective teams’ performances since only aiding his case.

Sure, he has the potential to be dangerous, but in a forward-heavy gameplan, Moylan should only receive the ball on the last, with limited opportunities or not at all if the Blues find themselves on the back foot, as is the NSW way.

7. Mitchell Pearce
Let’s be honest, he was a lock the moment this team was envisioned.

He might be out for the season but I don’t see how that should have any effect on his impact in the origin arena and at least he’ll have an excuse once fans start accusing him of going missing.

8. Aaron Woods
Do I think that Woods is a bad player? Not at all. In fact, he’s pulled out some great performances for the men in blue. What he does is lay an excellent platform for the team to play off.

However, we saw in last year’s series that once Andrew Fifita stopped busting through the line, the Blues weren’t able to capitalise despite the platform their props provided.

Field position doesn’t mean much if you can’t do anything with it and a good platform is much easier to handle for the Maroons than a raging prop busting right through the middle. So while Woods’ name might not put a smile on Queensland’s faces, it certainly won’t put fear in their eyes.

He does have a handy offload, but this should be mediated somewhat by his equally handy ability to give away a much-needed penalty when Queensland get on a roll.

Image: Joe Castro/AAP

9. Cameron McInnes
As much as I would have loved to, it didn’t seem fair to pick Robbie Farah from reserve grade, no matter how good he was at denying the halves of ball at important times in the game.

With incumbent Nathan Peats ruled out with injury, the spot comes down to a toss-up between Cameron McInnes and Damien Cook. I had to deem Cook’s disposition for dangerous dummy-half scoots far too much of a liability for Queensland in a game featuring so much fatigue in the middle.

And so the position falls to McInnes to make his own in the hopes that he will be able to channel Peats’ work last series in completely adhering to the gameplan and not getting any silly ideas about playing what’s in front of him.

10. David Klemmer
I like Klemmer, in fact I’d like him to be a Queenslander. But, much like Woods, the Marrons have had a lot of practice lining up against him.

He runs hard, tackles hard but he won’t break the game open and as long as no one else in the forwards does either, Queensland should be able to manage his impact.

11. Josh Jackson
As mentioned in the opening paragraphs, backrow selections will revolve around workhorses and there’s not many better than Josh Jackson.

Capable of playing long minutes and invaluable in defence, Jackson will make it hard for the coach to justify giving him a rest while not putting too much pressure on the Maroons’ defensive line.

12. Jack de Belin
Another player capable of playing big minutes, Jack has certainly had enough noise around him to justify a debut call-up. While his defence is sure to make things difficult for Queensland through the middle, that same defensive workload should dent his impact in attack.

13. Trent Merrin
Doesn’t really fit the role of a defensive workhorse or a big-minute player, he’s mainly picked to give the Queensland forwards a softer target to aim at after the last two selections.

14. Boyd Cordner
Purely named on the bench to emulate one of Queensland’s favourite selection anomalies from south of the border: naming the captain on the bench!

The fact that he can play big minutes and only complicates the use of the bench are of course big advantages too.

AAP Image/Dan Peled

15. James Tamou
No legitimate Origin bench would be complete without a replacement prop and Tamou fits the criteria well. The Maroons have plenty of experience marking up against him and, like Woods, he’s good for a vital penalty just when you need it.

16. Wade Graham
Never received enough credit for helping Queensland retain the shield last series, and his discipline and decision making when under pressure are certain to be key factors in the Maroons’ battle plans once again.

17. Apisai Koroisau
I rate Apisai, so it is with a heavy heart that I nominate him for the utility role.

I’m sure he could do some damage coming on against tired bodies, but as is the case with all Manly players given the utility role for their state, he will only play for six to eight minutes, and only after the result is a foregone conclusion.

The Crowd Says:

2018-05-14T03:34:47+00:00

Remo Shankar

Roar Pro


They say there's a very thin line between satire and truth - and I think this article proves it....

2018-05-13T10:14:50+00:00

Footy 101

Guest


Agree that Dugan and Jackson pose little attacking threat to the QLD defensive line.

2018-05-12T05:32:39+00:00

Geoff from Bruce Stadium

Guest


Just realised you have Maloney at 7. Maybe the Cody Walker and Maloney pairing is as good as what is available - unless young Cleary can get fit again.

2018-05-12T04:23:58+00:00

Nat

Roar Guru


Aitken is a right center as is BJ and Jet (interested to see how he goes today on the left) so that leaves Mitchell on the left. I hadn't thought about Walker until it was mentioned this week but with Maloney controlling the game as he is, Walker may be a good one to float around and cause 'heads up' havoc.

2018-05-12T04:01:33+00:00

Nat

Roar Guru


We just don't need it DCE v Smith! Although Hunt and Munster have form.

2018-05-12T03:54:21+00:00

Geoff from Bruce Stadium

Guest


I saw Tim's and your Blues teams earlier in the week TB and they both looked pretty solid. But just thought that BJ would bring some x factor that can make something out of nothing just when you need it. And given how tight Origin games can be that can mean the difference between winning and losing. Couldn't understand why Tim was so dismissive in not choosing him. I very much doubt that Dugan will play in the first Origin so couldn't see much point in choosing him. I think Aitken has earned selection for one centre spot but its between BJ, Latrell Mitchell and possibly Jimmy the Jet for the other spot. Mitchell is still a bit young but can see him having a long future at Origin level. I agree with you that Tariq Sims should be on the bench - he will scare the pants of the Qld halves - but I would play James Maloney before Cody Walker. Maloney has the maturity and cool head that's necessary to steer the team around at Origin level. He's been unbelievable in getting the Panthers to second given their injury list. What a pick up he's been.

AUTHOR

2018-05-12T02:40:22+00:00

Emcie

Roar Guru


Unfortunately for us Farah is well removed from any serious discussion, at least Pearce was building up to another redemption story before getting injured

AUTHOR

2018-05-12T01:49:07+00:00

Emcie

Roar Guru


I reckon Cook, McInnes and Peats could all fill the role well, but I know I'd be a lot more nervous seeing Cook at dummy half 30 meters out from the line than any of the others. As far as the bench goes I don't think I've seen NSW effectively use a utility player since Craig Wing way back when. Wasn't there a year when Reynolds didn't even get off the bench? If they don't plan to actually incorporate a utility into the gameplan I don't see the point having one taking up a bench spot

2018-05-12T01:41:14+00:00

RM

Guest


Couldn't have put it better myself. Surely Farah deserved a call-up from reserve grade for this alone...I'd love to see Freddy reunite his halves pairing from Lebanon's glorious World Cup campaign with Farah and Moses running the NSW show. I give Graham plenty of credit for Qld's win last year too! The bloke was an absolute game-changer late in Game Two...

2018-05-12T01:40:46+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


It was bad luck for Gutho...99 times out of 100 Gutho kicks that into row Z. But that’s the beauty of the rugby league ball. Morris’ was worse as he was trying to shepherd the ball dead when it was only a metre over the tryline. Geoff - I put my origin side out there earlier in the week (Tim Gore stole my thunder!) and I thought long and hard about Leilua. He’s been pretty good, even when the Raiders were battling a bit and has been working into really good form. I think he’d be really good in Origin where someone that can bash their way over from close range or create space with an offload are worth their weight. Could potentially get targeted in defence but I’d be very comfortable with him getting picked. Its an interesting time - there will almost certainly be a new generation in the 3/4’s and with Leilua, Aitken, Mitchell, Turbo, Croker, Walker, Roberts, Scott in contention there are a lot of quality options.

2018-05-12T00:43:42+00:00

jamesb

Guest


I'm a dragons fan and i kinda agree with McInnes at nine. He is a good first grade player and plays a subordinate role to the other members of the spine. But he is similar to Peats. I would go with Cook at nine. And off the bench, have either Peachey or Cody Walker as the utility. NSW should stop been conservative

AUTHOR

2018-05-12T00:43:02+00:00

Emcie

Roar Guru


I don't think there are too many players that earn an origin jersey that haven't deserved it. This list is more about overall team composition and gameplans than individual ability

2018-05-12T00:40:57+00:00

Albo

Guest


Trouble is Rapana isn't eligible to play ! BJ will not know what to do with the ball ?

AUTHOR

2018-05-12T00:36:19+00:00

Emcie

Roar Guru


I've never felt safer as a QLDer than when Farah would take control at a crucial time with the game game in the ballance

AUTHOR

2018-05-12T00:34:28+00:00

Emcie

Roar Guru


Morris's effort earlier wasn't much better, but he got lucky. Origin's a pretty emotional game, not sure how BJ would handle it if things weren't going the Blues way. Not that I'm opposed to seeing that happen from my vantage point north of the border ;)

AUTHOR

2018-05-12T00:30:51+00:00

Emcie

Roar Guru


It was a toss up between Moylan and Moses, but Moylan got the nod thanks to playing at fullback which is a big part of getting selected for NSW

AUTHOR

2018-05-12T00:17:18+00:00

Emcie

Roar Guru


Yeah, I kinda like the idea of him coming off the bench late and trying to fix everything himself as well

2018-05-12T00:13:20+00:00

Geoff from Bruce Stadium

Guest


Gutho's effort last night must be up there with howler of the year so far. Why on earth didn't he just fall on the ball? He'll be having nightmares for days. Love the concept Emcie. Having a back 5 with no passing ability is gold. We'd see blokes zig zagging all over the place going nowhere - Keystone Cops style. I know Tim doesn't agree but I can see a spot for BJ Leilua in the centres for the Blues if he can continue his form for the next 3 weeks. Big body, good metres out of dummy half, sets up his winger. If he can control his temper he could be the game breaker NSW needs. Guess that's his weakness, If he gets stirred up he loses it.

2018-05-11T23:54:50+00:00

RandyM

Guest


Farah is the textbook definition of "overplaying your hand" when it comes to Rugby League. Super talented player on his day.

2018-05-11T23:54:40+00:00

Jeffrey Dun

Roar Rookie


Great concept Emcie. As a Queensland supporter I would much rather see a halves combination of Pearce and Moses. Moses has been spoken of in this context and is very popular in some circles, but in my view he is pretty flaky, with the added virtue of being a turnstile in defence. Queensland would have great success aiming a lot of traffic in his direction.

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