Who would play State of Origin in 2019? Part 1: Victoria

By Cameron Boyle / Roar Guru

I don’t believe State of Origin will ever make an appearance again in the AFL.

In the fast-paced, physical game we see nowadays, I understand why the AFL and the clubs are reluctant to make the best players in the game play another match.

However, the fan in me loves the idea of State of Origin. As AFL is effectively a one-country sport, there is no chance to see representative teams play against each other as may happen with international contests in other sports.

Once upon a time, State of Origin presented a way for the AFL to put the best players in the competition on a single field.

If State of Origin survived, how would those teams have looked today? Over four articles, I’ll post hypothetical State of Origin line-ups from the four States that played in the last full State of Origin competition in 1998: Victoria, South Australia, Western Australia and the Allies. The latter is comprised of Queensland, NSW, ACT, Northern Territory and Tasmanian players.

I’ve picked the teams based on their form this year, but if there is any uncertainty, I’ve tended to go with the player with a longer record of success.

For this exercise, I have gone with the location where the player started playing football. To use Tom Hawkins as an example, because he was born in NSW and started playing footy there, he is eligible for the Allies even though he later moved to Melbourne and was drafted from a Victorian under-age club.

For Part One in this series, here are the players who could have represented Victoria and played in the famous Big V.

Full Team
B: Dylan Grimes (Richmond), Daniel Talia (Adelaide), Tom Stewart (Geelong)
HB: Bachar Houli (Richmond), Mark Blicavs (Geelong), Nick Vlastuin (Richmond)
C: Scott Pendlebury (Captain, Collingwood), Patrick Dangerfield (Geelong), Luke Shuey (West Coast)
HF: Dustin Martin (Richmond), Jeremy Cameron (Greater Western Sydney), Gary Ablett (Geelong)
FF: Jordan de Goey (Collingwood), Tom Lynch (Richmond), Hugh McCluggage (Brisbane)
Foll: Max Gawn (Melbourne), Marcus Bontempelli (Western Bulldogs), Ben Cunnington (North Melbourne)
Interchange: James Sicily (Hawthorn), Adam Treloar (Collingwood), Dion Prestia (Richmond), Andrew Gaff (West Coast)

Backs
A team starting with Grimes and Talia will be hard to score against. Both players are among the league leaders in defensive contests won, and spoils. Talia is primarily used against taller players while Grimes has the ability to play both tall and small. His efforts in blanketing Charlie Cameron last weekend demonstrates Grimes’ versatility. Stewart offers the polish to this backline with his elite ball movement.

Half-Backs
Blicavs and Vlastuin have been jack-of-all-trades for their respective clubs but have been most effective in defence. Vlastuin has stepped up in the absence of Alex Rance and has become the leading intercept marker and rebounder for Richmond.

Blicavs is a strong contested player who can use his amazing running ability to be just as effective when the ball hits the ground. At 31 years of age, Houli has had a career best season. Amongst Victoria defenders he is in the top-5 in metres gained, score involvements and effective disposals.

Midfielders and ruck
Each of the five midfielders in this group are among the best in the league and bring a clear set of elite skills. Dangerfield and Shuey are both clearance guns who use their line-breaking ability to quickly transition the ball forward.

Cunnington is one of the best contested ball-winners in the AFL while Bontempelli brings a well-rounded set of skills to the table and is arguably the most complete midfielder in the competition. Pendlebury adds his usual silk to proceedings. Topping it all off is Max Gawn, who’s in the conversation for best ruckman in the league.

Who’s gonna win the flag? (Photo by Michael Willson/AFL Media/Getty Images)

Half-Forwards
The Coleman Medalist, Jeremy Cameron, brings his brilliant forward play to this team. Not only did he kick the most goals of any player, but he had the most score involvements and took the most marks inside 50.

On either side of Cameron are two Brownlow medallist who can also play through midfield. Martin is an aggressive, line-breaking machine who is dangerous around clearances and in front of goal. Ablett has undergone a mini-renaissance this year and is returned to something approaching his best form.

Forwards
Tom Lynch has added a new dimension to Richmond’s forward line this year and turned the Tigers into an even more dangerous team. De Goey is capable in the air and at ground level. Even as the Magpies have struggled at times this year, De Goey has generally maintained his play. Lastly, McCluggage has played at a very high-level in his third season in the AFL and has been a key driver behind Brisbane’s meteoric rise.

Hugh McCluggage of the Lions. (Photo by Bradley Kanaris/AFL Photos via Getty Images )

Interchange
Sicily offers the versatility to play tall or small at either end of the ground, although he has been especially important as an intercept defender for the Hawks. Boak and Treloar are both among the best contested players who can win a ton of the ball.

Andrew Gaff is more of an outside player, where his top-shelf running ability allow him to gain possession all over the field.

Andrew Gaff (Photo by Paul Kane/Getty Images)

Emergencies
Victoria is able to produce such a strong team, that a lot of really good players did not receive selection. The hardest omission was Jack Macrae, but other unlucky players include Josh Kelly, Josh Caddy, Shaun Higgins, Clayton Oliver, Zach Merrett, Josh Dunkley and Nick Haynes.

No matter who this Victorian team would be up against, they would be very tough to beat. The Big V would be both a high-quality team and a very even team.

In the next part of this series, I’ll look at the traditional enemy of Victoria and select a hypothetical State of Origin team for South Australia.

The Crowd Says:

2019-10-09T06:53:01+00:00

Matt Bolin

Guest


As long as there is passion behind the concept you could never rule out a possibility of it returning. After all the clubs allow there players to be released for the International rules series which is the same degree or risk and even for AFLX. It is not uncommon for people to feel the reluctance of clubs to put up strong hurtles against it for risk of injury of there best players but I would argue that if you are placing the whole season on a couple of players in your club wouldn't doing that be the biggest risk of all. At least if you invest in getting all your players up to scratch and release them for State of Origin in the unlikely event any of them get injured if your team has enough depth and has not put all there eggs in the one basket it shouldn't make too much of a difference if an injury occurs. A majority of fans and players would love State of Origin again if it were to happen it could be an amazing thing for the league and the fans who's teams aren't faring as well as others to get excited.

2019-09-04T23:44:01+00:00

JamesH

Roar Guru


Definitely ahead of Talia. And how does McCluggage (a midfielder/winger) get picked in the forward pocket over Stringer?!? I know it’s gonna be tough to pick a Vic side but if you’re selecting a full-forward line, you pick forwards. McCluggage pinch hits there but it’s not his primary role. He could potentially slot in on the bench or the wing at the expense of one of the 15 midfielders. Also the team says Prestia is on the bench but the article reads as if Boak was picked there. I’d have picked Macrae or Kelly ahead of both of them TBH.

2019-09-03T08:34:56+00:00

Jack A

Guest


Victorian side were given one final crack at taking WA players before the Eagles were given their license. Some players were told that WC would not be admitted into the league when they knew that they would in an effort to coax the best WA talent to Victoria. WC took what was left over and did magnificently from day one.

2019-09-02T07:00:49+00:00

The Brazilian

Roar Rookie


Sourstrayan?

2019-08-30T18:51:09+00:00

Goalsonly

Roar Rookie


The more players are linked to their communities and clubs alike the stronger the bond. Can you take the Richmond out of Richmond, what do you lose? Luke Hodge is forever Hawthorn but not just Hawthorn. He's Lara and Brisbane. I like these state sides and would support fledgling Queensland and NSW and NT team lists even if I'd never heard of the player or they never played AFL and I would like to see their home suburb or Town alongside their name. From little things...

2019-08-30T07:44:50+00:00

Doctor Rotcod

Roar Rookie


Look at the squawking and back-room deals before the Eagles could be set up. And,no,the Eagles weren't a state side when they began, they just got very good very quickly.

AUTHOR

2019-08-30T05:13:36+00:00

Cameron Boyle

Roar Guru


He does spend a lot of time around half-forward, but yes putting him in a forward pocket was a little bit of a dodge. There were just so many good Victorian midfielders I couldn't put them all where I wanted. McCluggage is in the top 5 for goals scored by Vic midfielders, so I put him in as a forward.

2019-08-30T00:11:15+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


What killed SoO was Victorian clubs not letting SA, WA & Tas players go to represent their states when the games didn't involve Victoria, as in, SA v WA, WA v Tas or Tas v SA. In fact NRL SoO only survives because there is only 2 states that play it.

2019-08-29T13:36:04+00:00

Gary

Roar Rookie


Cameron, a good theme of articles putting forth representative teams of each aussie rules state and the old allies. Two quick points though... 1 - AFL is a league, not a football code. Specifically, the code you are referring to is Australian Football (AF). No one calls cricket - "BBL", or calls soccer - "EPL". 2 - SoO required the individual state league bodies to work together. These include WAFL, SANFL, VFL, VFA etc. The establishment of the AFL, in 1990, and the clubs dotted around the country, effectively saw the demise and end of SoO.

2019-08-29T13:34:31+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


At this time. You did read where SA are on EQUAL wins with Vic and WA. Or were you NAPLAN trained?

2019-08-29T06:43:54+00:00

The Brazilian

Roar Rookie


Yeah, you're right. A SA team would suck big time.

2019-08-29T03:58:33+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


If worried about more games to cater for SOO why not reduce the season by one round. ----- Oh, that's right Victoria don't like being beaten. SA & WA are currently on equal wins with Victoria in SOO. ATM SA look poor so I'd take Gropers smashing the Big(head) V.

2019-08-29T03:17:59+00:00

DingoGray

Roar Guru


With the fact State of Origin never likely to occur again, couldn't they somehow tie it into All Australian? Pick Vic, SA, WA, Allies & All Australian Teams. Great Vic side by the way. I'm nitting picking but McCluggage is not a forward pocket. He's a out and out wingmen....

2019-08-29T03:04:30+00:00

Scott

Guest


I can’t wait till you do WA. If they are ever gonna do state of origin again now is the time to do it. For 1 of the 1st time ever their is a better team on paper then Victoria. The vice 2nd best team could still challenge anyone but the WA team right now is ridiculous. When injury free they have stars in every position. I’ll wait till you do your article before I put up my WA team

2019-08-29T02:06:20+00:00

TomC

Roar Guru


It's a very strong team. I suspect Robbie Tarrant would get selected ahead of Blicavs or Talia.

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