State of Origin 1 final score and result: Queensland claim Game 1 win at Suncorp Stadium

By Daniel Jeffrey / Editor

Queensland’s quest to claim back the State of Origin shield in 2019 has got off to the perfect start, the Maroons beating New South Wales 18-14 in Game 1 at Suncorp Stadium.

Three second-half tries to Kevin Walters’ side were enough to see off the Blues, and while Jake Trbojevic crossed with five minutes to go to set up a tight finish, it was a deserved win for the Maroons.

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It was a fast-paced start to the game, both sides trading good field position without really threatening to score before the first break in play ten minutes in. Shortly after, the Blues opened the scoring through a penalty 13 minutes in.

Queensland almost crossed for the first try of the game in successive phases, first after Will Chambers broke down the right and put Dane Gagai away down the touchline, next after Corey Oates put his boot on the chalk before touching down in the opposite corner.

The Bunker, which was called into action to confirm the Oates no-try, then denied the Blues a four-pointer when Cameron Munster was ruled to have grounded the ball for a drop-out just before Tyson Frizell got a hand to it.

But the Blues didn’t have to wait much longer for the first try of the game, Josh Morris crossing on his return to the Origin arena the very next set. Some superb James Tedesco footwork left Munster floundering and allowed the fullback to put Morris through the smallest of gaps to bust over the try-line.

The pre-game concerns around Ben Hunt’s unfamiliar role at hooker proved to be on the money, Damien Cook and Tedesco constantly finding metres up through the middle of the ground.

But Queensland comfortably finished the half the better of the two sides. The Blues’ left edge defence was shaky throughout, Latrell Mitchell and Cody Walker failing to perform cohesively in their new partnership.

(Photo by Cameron Spencer/Getty Images)

Cameron Munster was able to exploit that weakness with a surging break and filthy dummy which sent Mitchell entirely the wrong way, but Chambers was pulled down by Josh Addo-Carr before he could finish off the good work.

Hunt then put the Maroons in great position to finish the half after a near-40-20 went found touch via Tedesco, but the home side were unable to score before the break despite that.

Queensland’s stronger play continued into the second half, the Maroons dominating for the opening ten minutes and finally reaping some reward on the scoreboard when a superb Kalyn Ponga cut-out pass put Oates away to finish in the corner, before the young fullback converted from the sideline.

Brad Fittler opted to put Jack Wighton into the game for Walker, but the Maroons’ superiority continued, and the pressure told when a Daly Cherry-Evans kick forced Mitchell to pull down Matt Gillett metres from the try-line. The Bunker denied Queensland’s calls for a penalty try, but the New South Wales centre was sent to the bin for ten minutes at a time his side could ill-afford to be down a man.

Ponga duly converted the ensuing penalty to tie the scores up at eight apiece.

New South Wales looked to have avoided any further scoreboard damage with 12 men, somehow keeping Queensland at bay for most of the following ten minutes, only to be hit when they were on the attack.

Wighton slid across the field ten metres out from the Queensland try, but his forced pass to Addo-Carr was easily picked off by Dane Gagai to speed away for the intercept try.

Just minutes later, Gagai found himself crossing for try number two – this one courtesy of another Ponga pass – after Queensland had been gifted field position by a Tedesco knock on.

(Photo by Chris Hyde/Getty Images)

Gagai’s second try was the sealer, with Ponga’s conversion putting the Maroons up by ten and the Blues out of the game.

The final result was no more than the Maroons deserved, having had three tries disallowed – albeit correctly – and enjoying the better of the play for much of the last hour.

While Ponga and Munster were superb in driving Queensland to victory, it was the Maroons forward pack which delivered the win, not giving the New South Wales halves a platform to gain good field position. Nathan Cleary was quiet in the second half after a strong first 40 minutes, while Walker was ineffective on his Origin debut.

For the Blues, Damien Cook was outstanding throughout, and Tedesco was also strong despite his knock-on.

The series now moves to Perth for Game 2 of the series, to be played on Sunday, June 23 at Optus Stadium.

The Crowd Says:

2019-06-06T00:46:20+00:00

Mac

Guest


Agreed, just saying that Maloney steered us around in the first two games last year when Cleary looked a bit lost. This year we have stuck with an out of form Cleary and the replacement for Maloney ended up being hooked and then sent back on (Fittler's fault not his). The point I'm making is that Maloney is a proven big match player despite recent lack of form (two premierships with two different clubs and an origin winning pivot). He does not crack under pressure and it felt as stupid leaving him out at selection time as it does after the result for me.

2019-06-05T23:34:13+00:00

Emcie

Roar Guru


Not against this halves pairing. At any rate, all I'm saying is that it's not a garunteed fix

2019-06-05T23:27:00+00:00

Mac

Guest


Actually they won the series with him.

2019-06-05T20:32:23+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


There was a pretty poor quality article on the Roar comparing the two teams and even for a diehard supporter it was a bit embarrassing. One of the points made was that NSW bench was better because they were all starters and played big minutes for their club. But that would only be a valid argument if players like Fifita and Joe O were starting for Queensland. it’s not what either team needed from their bench and Walters completely outmanoeuvred Fittler with his use of the reserves.

2019-06-05T18:14:00+00:00

Fraser

Roar Rookie


You're absolutely right about the better use of the bench by Queensland. David Fifita came on the field around the 48th minute and spent the next 20 minutes absolutely terrorising NSW with hard running, quick play the balls, and big hits. His intensity really turned the game in QLD's favour. But after his 20 minute stint he was pulled from the field to let the starting pack do their job and close the game out.

2019-06-05T13:23:55+00:00

Insider

Roar Rookie


Well the Whispering is one up on the earthing 5n a haf k worth it

2019-06-05T13:22:19+00:00

Emcie

Roar Guru


I reckon the 47 minute mark was about the time when the QLD halves took control of the attack as well, before that it looked a lot more like “just get it to Ponga” and anything that happened was off individual effort but after that they looked a lot more organised in attack. QLD won that through sheer weight of attack in the end, much like game 3 last year.

2019-06-05T13:21:55+00:00

KenoathCarnt

Roar Rookie


It's not just that though when Gagai played for Khights at wing he played big impacts in games constantly. Since playing center he hasn't showed that same impact. I just think South's would be an even better team with him at wing.

2019-06-05T13:21:45+00:00

robbo

Guest


papali arrow and maguire weregreat. love him or hate maguire is there for the moments. more jurbo and klemmer we would have been in trouble.

2019-06-05T13:20:49+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


Chambers didn’t sing it either and Hodges had things to say about it too. Why didn’t the “stink” affect their dressing room? Absolutely nonsense

2019-06-05T13:20:09+00:00

Emcie

Roar Guru


Dunno, they looked pretty rudderless with maloney in the previous origin game...

2019-06-05T13:19:25+00:00

Haz

Guest


As a Westralian rugby league tragic, I can't wait to go for G2 here in Perth. Will be awesome. Hope the Maroons sew up the series in front us.

2019-06-05T13:17:32+00:00

jimmmy

Roar Rookie


QLD had too many good ball players. Too many good kickers and too much hustle. Origin the way it should be played . Can you imagine how good we would be if we didn’t have a lukewarm pack ?

2019-06-05T13:10:41+00:00

McTavish

Roar Rookie


Couldn't understand taking your 5/8 off? DCE/MUNSTER/PONGA GOOD OPTIONS!

2019-06-05T13:10:28+00:00

Adsa

Roar Rookie


I thought DCE was a bit quiet in the first half but he kicked well. If he gets more confident to have a run over the next few weeks he will be a great foil with Munster in Perth.

2019-06-05T13:06:50+00:00

McTavish

Roar Rookie


Except Keary really grew up and wanted to play for Qld.

2019-06-05T13:05:17+00:00

McTavish

Roar Rookie


Tosser

2019-06-05T13:04:52+00:00

E-Meter

Roar Rookie


Years and years of losing does that. That 2nd half was useless and it happens all the time. Once Qld got their act together there was only one result. The series is finished.

2019-06-05T12:51:41+00:00

Big Daddy

Guest


The return of Gillett to pair with Kaufusi was outstanding and probably best game of Papali in SOO. Munster is an absolute gun and Cherry-Evans certainly has certainly stepped it up a notch. Klemmer was outstanding and cannot understand why he was on bench for the last few minutes.

2019-06-05T12:48:03+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


Why waste two interchanges in a 5/8 anyway? It’s madness.

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