Origin selection criteria need an overhaul

By Danielle Smith / Editor

The discussion around the eligibility criteria for State of Origin emerges every year. There is always a debate over who should be able to play for which state – or even any state.

‘He was born in NSW! He should be with us!’ I’m looking at you Greg Inglis.

‘He was born in Queensland! Why didn’t he play for the Maroons?!’ That’s you Peter Sterling.

‘He was born in New Zealand! How did he even play?!’ You heard me, James Tamou.

Over the years, there have been so many arguments over who should be eligible.

This flow chart shows the current eligibility criteria. They left out ‘can you pat your head and rub your tummy at the same time?’

Commentators and fans alike have been calling for changes to the eligibility rules for a while now, wanting to keep Origin the spectacle that it is, but having the best possible players take the field.

Brad Fittler said on NRL360 on Monday night that he went to the commission last year and asked them to review the eligibility for Origin.

“Prior to coaching the NSW team, I coached the 16s and the 18s,” Fittler said.

“I realised the pressures on young kids coming through who were either born in NSW or Queensland, or came over at different ages… I suggested we review these things… and a lot of the reactions were that we shouldn’t do anything.”

And then when everything came out about Ronaldo Mulitalo, Fittler thought it was “ridiculous”.

“I feel for Ronaldo and I hope they do review the eligibility because he is a perfect example of someone we should look at… there’s no reason why he shouldn’t play for Queensland,” Fittler said.

(Photo by Cameron Spencer/Getty Images)

Mulitalo has previously – albeit incorrectly – played for the Maroons in the under-16s, under-18s and under-20s.

Less than 24 hours from fulfilling his dream of representing his beloved Queensland at the top level, the state he moved to just before his 14th birthday, the rug was pulled out from underneath him because he didn’t live in Australia before he turned 13.

Fittler believes that the tiering system should go, the ageing system should be reviewed, and that it shouldn’t take away from the authenticity of Origin as State of Origin is about NSW and Queensland not national heritage.

I don’t say this often, but I totally agree with Freddy.

We are obviously – and wonderfully so – living in a time when our rugby league community has outgrown the criteria.

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While everyone plays the blame game for what happened to Mulitalo, I say we learn from it and finally make some necessary changes.

There are so many talented players from all different backgrounds who would give anything to play Origin. And – this is just as important – play for the team that they feel they most belong too. Where their loyalties lie.

Players like Jason Taumalolo, Addin Fonua-Blake and Viliame Kikau have all shared their dreams to play Origin.

And who can blame them? Origin is the pinnacle of the rugby league calendar. Many have said that playing for your country is an honour, but everyone is desperate to play Origin.

Queensland were missing the likes of Kalyn Ponga and Harry Grant last night. I wonder how they would have gone if their selection pool was bigger?

‘Daly Cherry-Evans plays the ball to Brandon Smith, who passes it onto a charging Jason Taumalolo, who offloads to a flying Ronaldo Mulitalo, who runs through and scores!’

(Photo by Matt Roberts/Getty Images)

Hmm. Interesting.

But unfortunately, some very outdated rules stand in the way.

Picture being a young kid now with dreams of playing in the NRL, and of course being picked for Origin, but feeling like they will never get to wear the Blue or Maroon jersey because of some very old-fashioned guidelines.

We have introduced and changed so many rules of late. Let’s scrap the Origin selection criteria and start from scratch.

This is my suggestion. I would have two criteria and then one determining question. And remember, my criteria have nothing to do with playing for Australia. This is purely about Origin. How it should be. International representation is completely separate.

1. You are either born in Australia, or…
2. If not born in Australia, you must have played junior footy between under-6s and under-17s here. Doesn’t matter which state, as long as it was in Australia.

I feel the two criteria are important to show rugby league in Australia has been a part of your life from a young age. It would have made players like Sam Burgess or Roger Tuivasa-Sheck ineligible. If you came to play in Australia from 18 onwards, you can’t be selected.

So, the determining question?

Where do your loyalties lie?

Now before you rip me to shreds in the comments section, just hear me out.

(Photo by Bradley Kanaris/Getty Images)

Look at these scenarios.

Were you born in NSW, but have spent most of your life growing up and playing in Queensland?

Were you born in Queensland and played some footy in Queensland, moved to NSW where you played some more footy?

Where do your loyalties lie?

Luke Keary was born in Queensland. He and his family moved to NSW when he was ten. He wanted to play for Queensland, like his idol Allan Langer. He even wrote to the NRL to pledge his allegiance to the Maroons, but he was denied, and told if ever selected for Origin he would play for New South Wales.

That doesn’t sit right with me.

This might sound fluffy and from a world full of rainbows and unicorns. It could work. It would take Origin to a whole new level.

Disagree? Then give me an alternative.

And don’t say ‘you can’t just pick who you want to play for! It’s called State of Origin because that is where you were originally born or come from!’

We know that is not the case for everyone that has played Origin. Or tried to. Hey, Ronaldo?

It’s called the National Rugby League and we have a team from New Zealand so things change.

The rules may be clear – but they are archaic.

If Origin is all about passion, emotion, loyalties and pride – my idea will showcase it in all its glory.

Making more players eligible will only bring positives to Origin and showcase exactly the level of talent we have in this country.

When you sign a contract in the NRL, you are asked to select who you would represent at state level. If you meet the criteria, I say pick who you want.

The game would still be state against state, mate against mate.

Whether you agree with me or not, I’m sure you can get on board that the criteria need to align with the times.

At the end of the day, we all just want State of Origin to be – oh, what did Tina Turner use to sing about? That’s right, simply the best.

The Crowd Says:

2021-06-30T09:12:19+00:00

jimmmy

Roar Rookie


But he's arguing the eligibility rules should be changed . Not what is , what should be.

2021-06-30T09:09:26+00:00

jimmmy

Roar Rookie


Very good points. He can be QLD premier but not play for QLD ?? People don't get times have changed. Born here , born there . Who cares. Where do I align myself. Thats the deal.

2021-06-30T09:03:54+00:00

jimmmy

Roar Rookie


Strong agreement here Lady . Australia has changed . Rugby League needs to change with it.

2021-06-30T09:02:14+00:00

jimmmy

Roar Rookie


Matt yours is a simple yet elegant solution. I don't why Pacifica players can't play Origin.

2021-06-30T01:19:56+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


Yeah, fair enough. My final position is that the reason Origin is the best of the best is BECAUSE of the eligibility criteria and the passion that generates… all stars games don’t…

2021-06-30T01:09:58+00:00

andyfnq

Roar Rookie


Exactly right, State of Origin should be completely separate from international footy. Internationals are irrelevant while SOO is the peak for all players in the NRL.

2021-06-30T01:07:17+00:00

andyfnq

Roar Rookie


Have to agree to disagree. I will finish by restating that as the best match up in Rugby League, Origin should be available for all NRL players, not just those born in those states or who moved to them as children.

2021-06-30T00:07:39+00:00

Sing The Blues

Guest


With that ridiculous idea... I really don’t think you are. I’m getting a better contract deal at 16 to play in Queensland. I want to play for Queensland? You’re kidding!

2021-06-29T23:58:13+00:00

Onya!

Guest


You’re looking to make it a free for all. As playing at state level was actually designed to choose players to play for Australia. What’s the point of your free for all to play policy? If that’s the way it is, you might as well scrap the whole thing & choose rep players straight from clubs, when required. This free for all policy would only be one pushed by Queenslanders right now.

2021-06-29T23:48:33+00:00

Over It

Guest


Then you can’t call that SOO. As it’s just not so! From my examples above. Obviously they weren’t playing for their SOO either. Just being offered a better contract at 14, 16 or whatever to play in either state shouldn’t be the criteria to who you wish to play for. That is what’s being proposed here. Again, that’s coming from Queenslanders who are looking at the current Queensland team . Then who else is available to play for Queensland & not liking what they see. So wanting change in the selection criteria.

2021-06-29T23:36:04+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


Yeah ok, I think that plan ruins Origin and is worse for international footy…

AUTHOR

2021-06-29T22:34:56+00:00

Danielle Smith

Editor


Just for the record, I'm a passionate Blues supporter.

2021-06-29T22:12:15+00:00

andyfnq

Roar Rookie


Everyone who plays NRL for long enough should be eligible. Origin is picked exclusively from players in the domestic competition; if you play that competition (for long enough), you should be able to make it to the top level of the sport (if you are good enough). Like it or not, Origin IS the top level of NRL, not the joke that is international footy. And being that it is the pinnacle, it's not right seeing great players miss out. And Origin should have nothing to do with internationals. Tier 1 or 20, I don't care as long as you play in the NRL.

2021-06-29T21:59:33+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


“By your argument, every player not born in Australia – not just that, but born in NSW/QLD – should not play origin” That’s not even close to my argument. My argument is that there needs to be some criteria to qualify for Origin or it becomes meaningless. Funnily enough that ‘Origin’ concept is important to the integrity of Origin I’m happy for the players that play for tier 2 nations and also meet the origin criteria to play Origin. I think it’s a smart move. I could potentially get behind NZ and English players playing who meet the local criteria, but if we start letting the Taumalolos, Burgess’, Grahams and Johnsons playing we may as well scrap Origin and call it All Stars But we’ve already seen that fans and players maybe enjoy the All Stars concept but no ones passionate about it like they are Origin… which full circle is exactly why Origin needs to maintain some qualifying criteria

2021-06-29T21:59:26+00:00

andyfnq

Roar Rookie


The only farcical bit is both Tonga and NZ. Australain states are not nations, and are picking from players in the domestic competition, not players based overseas

2021-06-29T21:56:26+00:00

andyfnq

Roar Rookie


“Do we really want to allow players, motivated by money passion, to play Origin and then still play for a tier 1 like NZ or England?” Yes, yes I do. You summed up what I have been trying to say beautifully, thank you

2021-06-29T21:53:37+00:00

andyfnq

Roar Rookie


The problem is that too many great players are not born in either state and are missing the pinnacle of NRL through an accident of birth. It's not 1980 anymore. If you identify with a State, that is good enough for me.

2021-06-29T21:49:16+00:00

andyfnq

Roar Rookie


Should be able to be both. State selection should have no bearing on international eligibility, hence the "scrap the tiers" part of the arguement

2021-06-29T21:45:17+00:00

andyfnq

Roar Rookie


Stop living in the past, it already is - just that some stars are missing through outdated ideas of where League players originated from. It's not 1980 anymore.

2021-06-29T21:42:21+00:00

andyfnq

Roar Rookie


I'm happy to have internationals playing origin. Let's face it, they already do, does it really matter if the arrived at 13 or 23? They are still born outside of Australia. Screw international footy. You quite rightly pointed out it is already a step down. By your argument, every player not born in Australia - not just that, but born in NSW/QLD - should not play origin. Sounds dull. Let's get the best of the best playing for who they identify with, that's what I want to see.

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