Did Jake Trbojevic just play the perfect Origin game?

By Stuart Thomas / Expert

NSW coach Brad Fittler swung the axe after Origin I, in full knowledge that the Blues needed something and needed it immediately.

Reagan Campbell-Gillard, Tariq Sims and Ryan Matterson were on the end of his violent slash in the engine room, with Jake Trbojevic brought back into a team that many felt he should never have been left out of in the first place.

In his ever-calm, precise yet passionate way, the Manly warrior stepped into Optus Stadium on a mission, yet obviously told few just how determined he was to prove his worth as a Blue.

Playing one of the best Origin matches I’ve seen from a forward who sets himself for the full 80 minutes each time he takes to the field, Trbojevic reminded Fittler that next time around, it might be best to pencil him onto the team sheet long before the more difficult decisions arise around who gets in and who misses out.

The 28-year-old was inspiring and statistically unparalleled across a broad range of indicators that should have seen him accept player of the match honours after the final whistle. Instead, the humble champion spoke calmly post-game, repeating the word ‘nice’ multiple times when reflecting on having family there to witness the match and in regards to his return to representative footy.

Aside from a single conceded penalty, it was almost impossible to identify a flaw in Trbojevic’s game.

Sure, he didn’t score a try or set up a teammate’s, yet there were 148 powerful running metres off 17 carries that asked everything a coach would want of an opposition defence.

A cheeky 19 kick-return metres were also a feature, while his 61 post-contact metres were the highest of any of his side’s forwards, with only wingers Brian To’o and Daniel Tupou managing more.

(Photo by Mark Kolbe/Getty Images)

Perhaps confirming the reasoning behind his selection, the Mona Vale junior passed the ball on just five occasions, focussing rather on winning back some control and dominance in the centre of the field that had been conceded to the Maroons in the opening game.

Defensively, Trbojevic completed 31 tackles – bettered only by Isaah Yeo with 35 – and did so at a tackle completion efficiency of 96.88 per cent, a lone ineffective effort blotting his copybook.

There were zero errors in his game, never was he stripped of the ball in a one-on-one tackle and not one ruck infringement was conceded to provide the opposition with momentum at any stage of the contest.

Jake Trbojevic looks to pass the ball during game two. (Photo by Paul Kane/Getty Images)

Trbojevic was adjudged on-side all night, never cautioned or reprimanded, and it was a typically clean game from one of the most respected players in the NRL.

It was exactly what NSW needed and provided a driving impetus that eventually saw the damn wall break after the Queenslanders held firm during what was a closely fought first half.

Come the conclusion of the contest, the statistical domination right across the board was impressive, yet that was made possible by a much more consistent and intent effort through the centre of the field by the Blues, led by Trbojevic and supported by Yeo, Junior Paulo and Payne Hass, as the dominant metre eaters.

(Photo by Chris Hyde/Getty Images)

It was exactly what many had called for in Game II, yet something less than easily delivered.

Most impressive is Trbojevic’s ability to achieve the numbers he does on a regular basis in the most gladiatorial of sports without ever seeming to lose his composure or clear sense of purpose. That may well be his greatest asset.

Not gifted with blistering speed or a frame befitting an elite and gracious athlete, Jake Trbojevic simply understands what it takes to lay a platform for rugby league success. Most weeks, he heads onto the field and plies his trade, aiding smaller and more nimble men to capitalise on his toil.

Fittler would be best to never again undervalue such work ethic and efficiency.

The coach mucked things up in Game I and Trbojevic, along with plenty of helpers, saved his skin in Origin II.

It is difficult to recall a better Origin game played by a NSW forward and if the prop has another one in his locker for Game III, the Blues may well be looking at a comeback and Trbojevic-inspired series win.

The Crowd Says:

2022-07-07T13:14:41+00:00

Lord Ted Said

Roar Rookie


Everyone is offside and no marker is square. Happens in the u7’s. Those maroon tinted glasses might a bit too thick?

2022-07-01T00:52:16+00:00

Tom

Guest


Yes - some players who weren't massive just manage to have great tackling technique and absolutely fold people in half. Think the Axe, Alan Tongue, Nigel Plum, Steve Matai, Liam Martin, and Jakey T.

2022-07-01T00:49:49+00:00

Tom

Guest


Agreed - I think selectors should err on the side of not changing winning teams. It is odd that Tariq Sims was shown loyalty despite being quite poor at club level, whereas Jake and JAC were not.

2022-07-01T00:16:44+00:00

Badseed

Roar Rookie


‘97 a roid fueled Knights team comeback to win in the dying minutes. ‘07 the Storm gives the rorters a blueprint for success. ‘13 rorters and $haynegate. All wins for the “good of the game “. Double check rep teams after Manly premierships.

2022-06-30T09:48:24+00:00

KenW

Roar Rookie


Disrespect? A Manly thing? He's the 3rd best player in his usual position. He did show on Sunday that he's worthy of inclusion regardless but there were plenty of good judges that didn't have him in their first Origin team. Jake has never won a premiership - with or against the odds - and has played 14 Origins. I think the idea of Manly discrimination might be a bit hard to support.

2022-06-30T08:08:21+00:00

Badseed

Roar Rookie


No worries they’ll probably axe Jake now for Matt Lodge. Owning Freddy certainly helps contract negotiations

2022-06-30T07:37:43+00:00

beachart

Roar Rookie


What a hoax.

2022-06-30T07:05:12+00:00

Larry1950

Guest


31 tackles, about half offside but the fix was in with the ref beforehand after fittler’s ref whinge. that’s why jurbo got selected, his regular offside defending & never square at marker.

2022-06-30T06:53:24+00:00

Redcap

Roar Guru


I'd give him a try at nine - it's not like Croker has much of a running game.

2022-06-30T06:53:17+00:00

kk

Roar Pro


Nat, I respect Jake because he seems a decent honest human. The fact that he never stops trying in his chosen sport is a bonus.

2022-06-30T06:31:35+00:00

Nat

Roar Guru


But why Manly? This chip on my shoulder is getting tougher to justify when these brothers are so good and more disappointingly - likeable.

2022-06-30T06:28:56+00:00

Nat

Roar Guru


That’s the beauty and reason Jurbo should have been there all along, he is the tuck it under the wing forward first. This ball playing stuff is only relatively new and stems from his ability to link well with his brother. Which, in turn, came from him tucking it under the wing and drawing defenders. It certainly helped that Turbo could explode through even a half gap but suddenly Jurbo became this ‘ball playing lock’.

2022-06-30T06:27:33+00:00

Dean

Roar Rookie


The malls cause less injuries on the Southern Beaches :shocked:

2022-06-30T05:22:11+00:00

up in the north

Roar Rookie


Was just wondering how many are involved in NSW selections. I find it hard to believe the adults allow him too much autonomy with decision making.

2022-06-30T02:40:25+00:00

Ouch

Roar Rookie


why would Jake, or anyone for that matter, swap the Northern beaches for wherever the hell St George is? :laughing:

2022-06-30T02:34:00+00:00

Lord Ted Said

Roar Rookie


Well it's a lesson well learnt now I'd say... From a Rugby League purist point of view Jurbo's tackling technique is the most aesthetically pleasing in the game. I love him and on behalf of others I'd like ti invite him to come and play for St George. He can bring his brother too.

2022-06-30T02:22:27+00:00

Albo

Roar Rookie


Jake is a great player and any team would want him in their pack. But Jakie is too slow to play like a Yeo or Murray as a popular type of 13 these days. Jake is now a prop doing big tackles and running hard yards up the guts, where he will always shine for NSW or Manly.

2022-06-30T01:16:32+00:00

Ouch

Roar Rookie


Not sure how or why Fittler thought those Parra lightweights were a better option than Jake.

2022-06-30T00:50:22+00:00

kk

Roar Pro


Lucky is the man who shares a trench with Jake. Fortunate is the team list carrying his name. Play it again. Jurbo.

2022-06-30T00:42:05+00:00

astro

Roar Rookie


The main question for me (as a Manly fan) is whether or not Jake should play prop permanently. In the 'faster' game we have today, a more mobile prop who can play long minutes, but still eat up meters and control the centre of the field on defence, is hugely valuable. As great as Jake is, I'm not convinced trying to turn him into a version of Isaah Yeo as a ball-playing lock, is the best use of his abilities. For me, I'd have Jake at prop and Schuster at lock for Manly.

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