Six talking points from State of Origin Game 1

By Scott Pryde / Expert

The New South Wales Blues have racked up 50 points for the second time in their State of Origin history, embarrassing the Queensland Maroons in Townsville. Here are my talking points from Game 1.

More Origin 1
» REACTION: Maroons are headed for a 3-0 Blue-wash after insipid Game 1 display
» MAROONS PLAYER RATINGS: Queensland struggle all across the park
» BLUES PLAYER RATINGS: Turbo stars but all NSW players dominate
» AS IT HAPPENED: Game 1 scores, highlights, result and blog
» Team news for NSW and Queensland ahead of Origin 2

The Blues spine is something special

Fifty points in an Origin game isn’t something that happens all that often.

Brad Fittler will more than likely want to talk about how good his team’s defence was throughout the game and, don’t get me wrong, it was exceptional.

But their attack was on another level. Given the way the Blues imploded in Origin last year despite being heavy favourites, fans and punters alike could be forgiven for having serious question marks over the team coming into this year’s series.

Those questions were answered emphatically across the 80 minutes, however, with James Tedesco, Nathan Cleary, Jarome Luai and Damien Cook all having excellent games and, more importantly, being leaps and bounds ahead of their opposite numbers in maroon.

While Tedesco and Cook have proven themselves previously at this level, Cleary had his best game in sky blue, shutting down his doubters after some sub-standard performances previously.

More importantly for New South Wales, he managed the game and got through tough periods and despite playing with a severe cut to the face. He also had an excellent combination with debutant Jarome Luai, who took to Origin as well as any rookie we have seen in recent history.

Maybe it shouldn’t be a surprise given how good Cleary and Luai have been in guiding the Panthers to 12 straight victories to start the NRL season, combining for 26 try assists, but neither of them put a foot wrong.

The Maroons have a lot of homework to do defensively if they are to stay in the contest next time around.

Jarome Luai. (Photo by Mark Kolbe/Getty Images)

Queensland’s back five have to be better in Game 2

It goes without saying that the Maroons will have to be better in every element of their game come the next instalment of this series at Suncorp Stadium.

While there were differences all over the park, the biggest one was in the outside backs – in both attack and defence.

In this new era of rugby league, with six agains and a fast style of play, possession, territory and minimising errors are absolutely everything.

The Blues were able to do that by getting their sets off to good starts on a consistent basis, with four of their five outside backs running for almost or over 200 metres.

The only member of the Queensland back five to clear 100 metres was fullback Valentine Holmes.

The Blues back five almost acted like an extra forward, while the Maroons’ back five, in a throwback to Game 2 last year, failed to get their team onto the front foot at any point.

That lumped pressure onto the forwards and, in turn, halves Daly Cherry-Evans and Cameron Munster – who failed to deal with it at any point.

More than that though, the Maroons’ back five were atrocious defensively. They made 14 missed tackles and nine errors between them.

With numbers like that, especially against the potent outside backs of the Blues, it’s going to be near impossible to win a game of rugby league, let alone in the Origin arena.

Brian To’o. (Photo by Ian Hitchcock/Getty Images)

The New South Wales bench stopped Queensland from any hope of a comeback

It’s not every day your potential starting front rowers are coming off the bench, but for the Blues, that is exactly the situation they found themselves in.

While the Blues had been good early in the contest, the Maroons certainly weren’t out of it. But just as the home side attempted to turn the momentum around and make their own way into the game, Payne Haas and Junior Paulo rocked the game again.

Paulo was solid in his job, almost as you’d expect a bench forward to be, but Haas showed everyone why he is regarded as one of the best props in the game.

In a monster 57-minute stint, he made 132 metres from just 13 runs and added 33 tackles without a single miss. Not only that, but his footwork, ball playing and four tackle busts added time and space for Cleary, Luai and Tedesco to work with through the middle.

While Liam Martin and Jack Wighton didn’t have quite as much impact, they were never going to, and simply didn’t need to given the outstanding efforts of Tariq Sims and Cameron Murray in the second row, and the entire backline in the 44-point thumping.

The bottom line for New South Wales is that Haas, Paulo, Saifiti and Jake Trbojevic, as well as the elusive Isaah Yeo in the middle third, make for an excellent rotation that Queensland will struggle to match all series, even when Josh Papali’i makes his likely return for Game 2.

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Christian Welch proved his importance to the Maroons

You could almost hear the collective groan from Queensland supporters when Christian Welch was taken out of the game with a head injury assessment (HIA) in the first ten minutes.

That groan only got louder when it was confirmed he wouldn’t return.

While Welch wasn’t able to have a great deal of involvement for the Queenslanders during the opening minutes, he has fast become one of the best props in the competition within the Melbourne system. It’s been clear to see playing under Craig Bellamy has allowed his development to go from strength to strength.

He has made just a tick under 150 metres per game, tackles with great efficiency and has had 32 offloads in 11 appearances for the Storm so far in 2021, and it was that influence the Maroons desperately needed at times.

Of course, losing a starting prop is going to impact the rotation whichever way you look at it, particularly in a brutally fast-paced Origin game, but the loss of Welch stung just a little bit more.

Granted, Moeaki Fotuaika stood up and led the way in his absence, but he didn’t get the help he needed, and it showed on the final scoreboard.

(Photo by Mark Kolbe/Getty Images)

The Blues nailed their centre pairing

One of the more pleasing elements of the Blues’ game was the centre pairing of Latrell Mitchell and Tom Trbojevic.

The duo both had outstanding games, with Trbojevic setting the bar from the opening minute by taking two of the first four runs, while Mitchell, once he got into the game, was absolutely impossible to stop.

The only blemish on centres’ game was Tom Trbojevic missing a simple one-on-one tackle to allow Kurt Capewell to stroll over for the only Queensland try.

Both centres approached the 200-metre mark, combined for three try assists, three line breaks, five tries and 14 tackle busts, while they were both also defensively solid, as the entire Blues team was from start to finish.

That goes without saying when the opposition only breaches the line once, but it was Trbojevic and Mitchell in attack who were a major part of the reason New South Wales were able to skip away with the game almost as if doing it easily.

Tom Trbojevic. (Photo by Mark Kolbe/Getty Images)

That shouldn’t be the last Origin in Townsville

The ground might be a bit smaller, and the problem surrounding money will be an issue unless the Queensland government decide to play ball again, but Origin in Townsville is an experience that should be repeated in the future.

It’s not something that’ll happen every year, but the crowd were parochial, particularly early before Queensland were blown off the park.

The atmosphere of the crowd was hardly a surprise – for the North Queensland region, it’s an experience which they have never had before, and is possibly one of the biggest ever events to come to Townsville.

The Cowboys in the NRL have one of the most hardened supporter bases, travelling from places as far away as Mount Isa just to get a look at their team run around, and having Origin in the region is almost a reward for the efforts and often sacrifices they make to give the Cowboys and game in the region more generally the dominance it has.

The atmosphere in Townsville also more generally makes the argument that Origin should never be played outside of New South Wales and Queensland. The balance of keeping rugby league’s biggest showcase in the two states against expansion areas is an important one, but it shouldn’t be one neutral game per year.

Origin means too much to fans in New South Wales and Queensland to turn it into something mirroring an exhibition game in non-rugby league heartlands.

Roarers, what did you make of Origin 1? Drop a comment below and let us know.

The Crowd Says:

2021-06-12T05:42:49+00:00

Kent Dorfman

Roar Rookie


IF Origin is the showpiece of RL & is televised around the world, WHY do we continue to allow the WORST comentatotrs to call the game in Ennis, Anasta etc & if Gould is let near a microphone again that’ll do me? the Only ex players who should be allowed to call the game are Sterlo & Fatty (for his comedic relief)

2021-06-11T19:02:08+00:00

TJ-Go Force!

Roar Rookie


M.uppet

2021-06-11T18:56:12+00:00

Paulo

Roar Rookie


You realise what it looks like when you make a bullchit statement, try to defend it, then turn around and say ‘yea, nah, I was actually just being sarcastic’?

2021-06-11T12:47:38+00:00

Griffo 09

Roar Rookie


True. It was a very dominant performance, but I wonder if in years gone by (without the 6 again) a performance like that from NSW results in about 30-36 points. Now that in itself doesn't give me any confidence about Queensland turning it around, I'm just saying if new rules are contributing to higher scoring club matches, you would expect the same to be true of origin, and we should see that as a contributory factor to the scoreline. Therefore, how much do these historical benchmarks mean?Still a dominant win and based on form alone, it looks unlikely for Queensland, but Origin has swung from one game to the next before.

2021-06-11T07:41:45+00:00

TJ-Go Force!

Roar Rookie


You realise the sarcasm right in that statement?

2021-06-11T04:07:15+00:00

Albo

Roar Rookie


Yep ! I am not his greatest fan. He has definitely had footy focusing issues in the past. But I think he has matured a hell of a lot in recent times , and with his mind on the job, there are few more brilliant players running around out there !

2021-06-11T02:52:42+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


True.

2021-06-11T01:45:57+00:00

Mango Jack

Roar Guru


I was surprised, Albo. He can go missing in big games and I was one saying he shouldn't have been selected. Very happy to have eaten my words!

2021-06-11T01:43:28+00:00

Mango Jack

Roar Guru


QLD should have taken inspiration from Arnie in Predator: "If it bleeds, we can kill it!"

2021-06-10T21:33:35+00:00

Paulo

Roar Rookie


“Yes, Sterlo they did go low because the administrators have told them to and they don’t want to get suspended.” (My emphasis) You’ve repeated what Sterlo said. Then, with your use of ‘because’ you have attributed a motivation behind the statement Sterlo was saying. You are not just repeating what he said, you are inferring a cause of the behaviour. I got your point, I just think you’re wrong. My point was that that motivation or behavioural driver doesn’t make sense when you look at the wider behaviour the Maroons we’re doing. Hence why I listed all the other sanctionable offences they were committing. Does my original reply make sense for you now?

2021-06-10T20:57:06+00:00

Christo the Daddyo

Roar Rookie


I have zero interest in horse racing. I’d be delighted if it didn’t exist. But to repeat, I enjoy watching competition. A game that’s eight tries to one? That’s not a competition. And particularly, it’s not what SoO is about. Can I suggest you go back and watch some of the greatest games in SoO history? Quick tip: none of them will be blowouts…

2021-06-10T17:52:14+00:00

TJ-Go Force!

Roar Rookie


I'm repeating what Sterlo said about 20 times on the coverage champion. I didn't make it up or take the time to write the comment because it came from thin air. Yeah I saw the kick on the ground, that had nothing to do with my point, which you've completely ignored.

2021-06-10T12:06:36+00:00

Joey

Guest


Ok. Well kind sir. Looks like you have me stumped then old pal. Was just that you mentioned Qld can’t win with Turbo in the side, so wouldn’t that mean you are giving them a chance if he isn’t there ? If not, why say it ?

2021-06-10T11:47:20+00:00

Richie

Roar Rookie


Nice analogy Joey. I’m all for a good thrashing, as long as it’s my team doing the thrashing! I certainly miss watching Black Caviar.

2021-06-10T11:10:01+00:00

Joey

Guest


Griffo, it’s not just the 50. No team in history has scored more than 38 points in opposition territory. That was the record for 120 games. It’s definitely not as simple as getting it back together for Suncorp. There’s almost half the team here that hasn’t lost a game in season 2021.

2021-06-10T10:53:23+00:00

Charles Bidner

Guest


Not what I said. You seem to demonstrate the accumulative long-term effects of concussions received when playing. You played in the forwards?

2021-06-10T10:53:11+00:00

Joey

Guest


The condition is cardiac arrest, and no de-fib in sight.

2021-06-10T10:06:37+00:00

Joey

Guest


No freezing down here. Beer cold. Got no doubt they’ll be lots of drawing boards used over the next couple of weeks. Problem now for Qld becomes a distinct lack of confidence in the coach, and following that, every man and his dog including the players with their own opinion on how to get better. My observation is it would be fair to say when Qld held most of the Australian caps, they also won Origin after Origin and there wasn’t really much NSW could do about it, try as they may. Qld had better players and that was that. That’s my observation in reverse with NSW now, kinda like your name.

2021-06-10T08:11:33+00:00

Rellum

Roar Guru


Yes I completely missed it. We need an eye rolling emoji. I am more interested in how we dont let them dominate again. There are plenty of NSW will win evey game for 10 years comments to drink your warm beer to.

2021-06-10T07:46:51+00:00

Joey

Guest


Last night’s game was packed with some of the most scintillating pure rugby league you are likely to see. Did you watch Black Caviar and only want her to win by a nose, or savour leaving the rest floundering in her jet stream ? Surely not the former

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