Origin 3 match report: Fists fly in brutal decider as Maroons upset Blues - 'as good as it gets', says Slater

By Paul Suttor / Expert

Brutality returned to the State of Origin arena in a retro series decider at Suncorp Stadium with three players knocked out in the first four minutes, punches thrown and in another throwback to the 1980s, Queensland upset NSW 22-12 to claim the trophy.

Despite being out on their feet late in the game after losing two players to concussions inside the opening few minutes, the Maroons kicked early to turn NSW around and tackled themselves to a standstill to record one of the biggest upsets in Origin history.

“That’s as good as a Queensland victory as I’ve ever seen,” triumphant coach Billy Slater said. “It was a courageous effort. It was a resilient, tough performance. There’s some pretty proud boys in there and they’ve earned that.

“I don’t think I’ve been any prouder of a team that I’ve been involved in than I am right now. I don’t know whether that’s because I’m in the moment right now but I said it after game one, I just felt a real connection to this group and I’m just so proud of them. I can’t put it any other way.

Billy Slater and Ben Hunt celebrate. (Photo by Bradley Kanaris/Getty Images)

“I’m just so proud of the people they are. Their preparation, their behaviour, their performance and to go out and deliver that in front of their home people, that’s as good as it gets in sport.”

A try to Kalyn Ponga midway through the second half got Queensland with the fullback’s first four-pointer in a Maroons jersey now part of Origin folklore. Ben Hunt sealed the result in the 79th minute when he snaffled a Nathan Cleary chip kick to run 80 metres to the stripe.

“This is one of the most famous Maroons victories you will ever see,” Cameron Smith beamed in Nine commentary.

(Photo by Bradley Kanaris/Getty Images)

For Slater, the 2-1 series triumph after Queensland were hammered into humiliation last year was an amazing result for an undoubtedly legendary player who had never coached a senior side at NRL or representative level.

Blues coach Brad Fittler said the Maroons deserved the win but was unhappy about Tino Fa’asuamaleaui not being sin-binned for his part in Dane Gagai’s fight with Matt Burton.

“At the end of the day, Burton didn’t initiate it. He’s not going to fight anyone. He’s got belted. We got the penalty, he got belted, then got in a headlock and we walk out with one player down each. It’s a tad ridiculous. But it is what it is,” he said.

“We came up with some basic errors … it wasn’t anywhere near our best performance. Queensland were really good, without Cam Munster but (was it) the greatest (Origin) game, I’d say no.”

Maroons skipper Daly Cherry-Evans was emotional on the field, shedding tears of joy. “There’s a lot of history that’s gone before us and we unpacked a lot of that this week and we just knew that based on all of those Queensland moments that it was our turn to produce one.”

Rookie forward Patrick Carrigan was rewarded for his impactful efforts in all three matches by winning the Wally Lewis Medal for player of the series.

Carrigan looked stunned when his name was announced, as did a clearly delighted Cameron Smith who ushered the youngster towards the stage. “I don’t know what to say. I missed all that,” said Carrigan. “It was a tough series and the first five minutes really showed what it was about. I think the two fullbacks of both sides [Ponga and James Tedesco], probably one of them should be wearing this.

When it comes to Origin deciders, the Maroons are the undisputed kings. They have now won nine of the past 10 live game-threes and enjoy a 15-5 all-time record with two draws.

(Photo by Chris Hyde/Getty Images)

The first four minutes of the Origin were like no other in the 43rd year of the interstate contest with Blues forward Cameron Murray, and Queensland duo Selwyn Cobbo and Lindsay Collins ruled out for the rest of the match after copping heavy knocks.

Murray went first after the first minute after a head clash trying to tackle Corey Oates, stumbling as he tried to regain his feet.

Cobbo was the most sickening hit – he was knocked out after colliding with the hip of Carrigan in a gang tackle on Burton. 

(Photo by Bradley Kanaris/Getty Images)

Then it was Collins stumbling after being on the receiving end of the impact of Tom Gilbert’s tackle on Daniel Tupou. 

Slater couldn’t recall an Origin clash with so many wary casualties. “It was a unique game … I don’t know if I’ve seen a start to a game like that before.”

Former Blues skipper Paul Gallen in Nine commentary said “there wasn’t a lot of technique involved but they were putting their bodies on the line, that’s for sure”.

Queensland thought they had drawn first blood of the figurative kind in the eighth minute when Josh Papalii crossed after Jeremiah Nanai contested a Tom Dearden bomb but bunker ruled he propelled it forward in the aerial contest. 

After Fa’asuamaleaui was placed on report in 10th minute for high shot on Burton, the Maroons went 6-0 up when Tom Dearden laid on the first try of his Origin career when he raided the short side and Stephen Crichton botched the defensive assignment on Valentine Holmes. 

Blues pivot Jarome Luai claimed a try midway through the first half when he slipped but scrambled to win the race to a Cleary grubber and level the scores. 

Dearden was denied a second try assist in the 27th minute when his last pass to Oates was correctly ruled forward. 

Knights prop Jacob Saifiti, who had made an immediate impact with some damaging runs off the bench, barged over for a try on debut after the Blues had seized all the momentum throughout the middle part of the half. 

A patented gravity-defying spiral bomb from Burton caused Ponga massive dramas when the ball sailed away from his grasp but it bounced favourably for the home side. “Kalyn moved 10-15 metres and he was still two metres away from it,” Immortal halfback Andrew Johns said in awe from the commentary box.

Blues winger Daniel Tupou then spilt a more straightforward kick from Daly Cherry-Evans to give the Maroons a bonus shot at the Blues late in the first half. 

After the visitors deliberately conceded a couple of six-agains in the final minute of the half, Harry Grant circled around before dribbling a kick in-goal to set up a try to Kurt Capewell, who had switched to centre when Cobbo went off. 

Holmes missed the conversion from out wide so Queensland trailed 12-10 at the break, however they had not only stalled the NSW momentum but managed to bite back. 

The second half started with fireworks when Gagai took exception to Burton colliding with Ponga and the two ended up throwing punches, with several players rushing into the melee in a throwback to the early days of Origin

DCE nearly scored from a chip and chase while the fists were flying but the Blues got the penalty once the dust settled and the Queenslander chant went up around the packed Suncorp Stadium.

(Photo by Bradley Kanaris/Getty Images)

After being denied in the first half, Papalii was stripped of another rare touchdown in the 53rd minute when Nanai again propelled the pill forward before the prop could pounce.

Both teams allowed their opponents a chance to break the stalemate since half-time before Ben Hunt unfurled a 40/20 kick in the 58th minute which eventually led to a Stephen Crichton brain explosion close to his line when he passed in a tackle to nobody which nearly gifted the Maroons a try.

They hit the front on the next set after the line drop-out when Ponga beat four defenders from close range to touch down for the first time at Origin level to make it 16-12.

Johns marvelled at Ponga’s skill, awareness and determination. “That was just all heart. He just wanted that more. He just put that little skip to the outside of [Siosifa] Talakai. He knows the man. He’s not quite used to defending in that position of a back row.”

Grant bounced over from dummy-half in the 69th minute and celebrated enough to convince Ashley Klein he had grounded the ball but the bunker replays showed he was held up.

(Photo by Chris Hyde/Getty Images)

In the end it didn’t matter because Hunt’s effort not only repelled the last Blues counterpunch but sent them to the canvas.

Before the match, the Blues pulled a switch as expected with Junior Paulo getting the start ahead of Saifiti for the spot vacated by Jordan McLean’s hamstring injury while Queensland made a surprise move by starting Carrigan at lock and benching Fa’asuamaleaui, although he was in the action within a matter of minutes after the early carnage.

For a Maroons side which had lost Cameron Munster and Murray Taulagi to bouts of COVID-19 in the build-up to the match, the non-stop effort to claim the trophy has to rank as one of the state’s greatest since the birth of Origin in 1980.

The Crowd Says:

2022-07-15T05:25:03+00:00

steveng

Roar Rookie


I dont want an all in for nothing, as it was not the go, especially with hero Tino! Which makes the NRL look even worse to the do gooders and gives them even more rubbish to complain about.

2022-07-15T04:47:13+00:00

Harry

Guest


RL copied union on head/feed into the scrum to same side, the corner post not in play off the ground, "second phase ball, the spine (actually borrowed from AFL)., attacking the player in the air catching the ball is a penalty the definition of a forward pass and knock on but bizarrely both codes now pay staight down as knock on even if the rule doesnt say that (ie rule says ball must go forward) and of course RL borrowed all RU rules in 1896,

2022-07-15T04:18:35+00:00

Dennis

Guest


WOW!!!

2022-07-15T02:31:23+00:00

steveng

Roar Rookie


Mate, from what I’ve always loved and experienced when a player and what I’ve seen in the old days RL is a completely different game these days, as its like chalk and cheese, the game is being pressured into all sorts by all the do gooders as ‘I’m not just saying that’ its reality and that is why I’m saying that as its a FACT! As and as far as I’m concerned, I would like it to be anything and everything as it was in the old days! I played as a hooker in the old days when a scrum was a scrum and copped plenty in the scrums etc etc when I say that ‘turn Rugby League into a fair dinkum sport’ is only because the ‘old days are gone’ and that is the only option that RL has, as the current climate will not cop what we got away with in the old days and these all inns in games are all half pie clown shows, what I was saying is that the Burton v Gagai was fair enough and should have been left at that but, then you have a lose canon like Tino coming in and all hell breaks loose especially when Gagai was handling himself pretty well I though and Tino had no right to get involved, in the old days that would have been left at that and nothing else would have happened!

2022-07-15T02:24:41+00:00

Richie Walton

Roar Guru


“Wanting to win”. Not “any other result than NSW winning”.

2022-07-15T01:40:15+00:00

G money

Roar Rookie


The blues fans are particularly salty this year.. it's hilarious to see!!

2022-07-15T01:23:37+00:00

G money

Roar Rookie


Well when you use the term 'turn Rugby League into a fair dinkum sport' and complain endlessly about what is being regarded as one of the best games ever... it kinda seems like you don't like the sport, sorry.

2022-07-15T00:22:15+00:00

steveng

Roar Rookie


Well the grasshopper is why I lost interest as the bloke was really the start of all the blatant bias and not the other way around, if you were born or were around in those days?

2022-07-15T00:13:30+00:00

harry

Guest


Was the reduction of penalties for SOO to measly fine an INTENDED consequence so it would return to the "good old days" of biff?? People warned at the time so assume Barnum and Bailey V'Landys must have seen this coming...Short term ratings against growth of the game And the rumblings about allowing others into SOO to make it an All-Stars game seem to resurface every SOO though I notice the AFL had a story (origin unknown) on SOO day about Franklin going elsewhere means both can play the game. The story originally came out in May but didnt gain traction but the origin may have been agent, Swans, Buddy, News Ltd etc..

2022-07-15T00:11:00+00:00

steveng

Roar Rookie


:laughing: :laughing: :laughing: what??? Gagai was allover Burton, Burton was swinging at fresh air and wildly and never made contact, if anything Gagai threw and connected at least 3-4 times into Burton, Gagai didn't need any help from Tino as Tino was a lose cannon from the start! You're having yourself on if that is your excuse!

2022-07-14T23:42:43+00:00

Wallabies124

Roar Rookie


Well they certainly weren’t kicking him genius

2022-07-14T23:01:59+00:00

Dusty does Danger

Roar Rookie


Ha Ha! Gold :laughing: nothing like sticking it up the Blues!

2022-07-14T22:41:04+00:00

Kent Dorfman

Roar Rookie


comentators on the idiot box, cannot remember which ones

2022-07-14T22:29:02+00:00

Kent Dorfman

Roar Rookie


don't forget the beer & pizza!

2022-07-14T21:54:26+00:00

steveng

Roar Rookie


Hey “G money” that’s a pretty ordinary comment and signifies what you are all about as you haven’t got a clue what I’m all about, You have to be kidding me, I’ve played RL for 20 years and watch the game for roughly 65 years and you recon “you don’t actually like rugby league”??? How long have you been on the Roar? As I’ve never seen you here making comments as your are the usual Qld’er who only has a go when they win as last year we had none of youse on here.

2022-07-14T21:43:02+00:00

steveng

Roar Rookie


:laughing: :laughing: :laughing: well they weren't kissing him thats for sure boofhead!

2022-07-14T18:43:07+00:00

Paulo

Roar Rookie


Yea, standing over a knocked out player is pretty grubby too. I didn’t see any punches thrown there afterwards. Doesn’t change or justify the dog acts later. NSW have their fair share of grubs too. It’s not a zero sum situation.

2022-07-14T18:22:25+00:00

Dusty does Danger

Roar Rookie


Thanks Ken - yep Burton just ran over the top of him, the most dangerous QLD, player didn’t deviate when he saw him on the ground. But I suppose Pongia new his was there and should of let him walk on top of him. When Burton got his own back he thought he would pick on someone his own size. That was a mistake- cost the Blues the game right there. Num skull brought it on himself. He could of ran in his line of defence to help his teammates but no would rather inflame the situation. Tino save him from a belting!

2022-07-14T17:58:22+00:00

Dusty does Danger

Roar Rookie


Kent that makes great viewing for a popcorn night!

2022-07-14T16:57:10+00:00

Jack O'Bean

Guest


Disgraceful animals!!...between games the sposturing of of the league players, officials ageing decadent coaches dragged out onto footie shows.. and supporters....claiming these tattoo'd thugs ppurporting themselves as 'character building examples for the young', ...Sickening sanctimonious hypocrites in a spectator sport riddled over the decades with misogony, sexual gratification, drugs and alcohol abuse along with violence....You are a disgrace that a decnt society would oblterate...however...when a society permits the likes of 'outlaw' motor cycle groups to exist and run riot, and the discusting 'sport' of cage fighting it's a bit hard to control their equiovalents on the field when one also has the 'bring back the old biffo' cretins snorting and grunting. Quality game??...there's a laugh...with that long haired lout in the broncos putting a player at risk of death whilst allowing his mate to punch into the victim. The quality games these days are in the womens' sports...they actually play the game...not come out of gymnasiums fired up steroid.infused and narcissitic. The thing c alled a'scrum' in League is an indicator of the low level of the game...the high shots...the 'treatment'. I regard, from years of watching it, 'State of Origin' to be a pathos in concept execution and unfit for children to watch...a plague on both your houses and the money hungry creeps which employ you and pay you outrageous sums to pollute the environment. Voila

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