The representative fullback battle between Tedesco and Edwards: Now isn't the time to panic with knee-jerk actions

By James Mood / Roar Rookie

Much of the discussion surrounding either of the fullback positions in State of Origin has centred on Queensland’s decision between Reece Walsh and Kalyn Ponga.

Both entertainers and the form players of the competition last year, it is understandable that the media would focus on the impending showdown for the jersey.

But across the border, another selection battle has been brewing in New South Wales for the fullback position between Dylan Edwards and James Tedesco.

There have been calls for Tedesco to be dropped, and they grew louder following the Blues losing the series in the first two games last year, with Tedesco having a particularly bad performance in the opener.

NSW has lost three out of the past five series. This is despite boasting the superior talent pool in what was supposed to be our generation of revenge after the massacre that was the Queensland dynasty.

Change is necessary when results don’t fall your way. Looking at the success of Edwards over the past three seasons, he may seem like the logical successor.

One poor season from the Roosters’ number one is not reflective of a trend, but an anomaly, and Tedesco should not have his position questioned.

Now I can’t pretend that Tedesco had his greatest year last year. He was slow to start the season and his form was a microcosm of the Roosters struggles in general.

James Tedesco being tackled during game one of the 2023 State of Origin series. (Photo by Mark Kolbe/Getty Images)

Edwards on the other hand won his third premiership on the trot, going from strength to strength and playing a bigger role in the Penrith attack while ensuring they remained the best defensive team in the NRL.

This form resulted in him making his representative debut for the Kangaroos. The trajectories of their careers seem to be heading in the opposite directions.

The issues with Edwards have nothing to do with form but everything to do with style of play and fit. Let’s look at the statistics for both last seasons:

Dylan Edwards James Tedesco
Games Played 26 22
Tries 12 11
Try Assists 6 12
Line Breaks 12 15
Line Break Assists 13 12
Metres Per Game 207.3 186
Tackle Breaks Per game 6 5.7

Dylan Edward’s strength is evident. Out of his own end, he is the best in the competition.

Penrith also had the best defence in the competition, and Edward’s communication and positioning at the back are huge reasons for that.

What Edwards lacks is the ability to set up those around him. Not used as a sweeper or primary receiver, Edwards is an old-style fullback more resemblant of the 80s as opposed to now where they double up as a kind of ‘third half’.

The primary criticism of Tedesco is that he doesn’t pass the ball, a criticism that I believe was overblown and reactionary to a few poor decisions last year.

Even conceding that, it defies logic to replace a player for one defunct attribute with someone worse at that very said attribute.

At least alternatives like Scott Drinkwater, Tom Trbojevic or Latrell Mitchell offer quality with their final pass, although they all also have questions surrounding their selections at the position at this level.

Another argument has been combinations. Penrith have dominated the NRL which has in turn led to a number of their players being selected in the Origin team.

Dylan Edwards. (Photo by Mark Metcalfe/Getty Images)

Adding Edwards to that mix would lead to a more seamless integration of Penrith’s structure and success. But Origin is not club football, and the Blues’ blind adoption of the Penrith structure has been our downfall.

Nathan Cleary, for all his success in club football, hasn’t been as consistent in the Origin arena due to form and unavailability. Part of his troubles has been his reluctance to jump into the first receiver position, playing off the back of Isaah Yeo.

Yeo has been the form lock of the NRL, but his slow service often leads to Cleary getting rushed by more attuned defensive players, diminishing his decision time.

We all saw what he could do when forced to take on the game in the grand final last year with Yeo and Jarome Luai off the field.

Speaking of Luai, his lack of involvement and unwillingness to contribute on the fifth tackle has been part of NSW’s undoing.

Again, I keep saying it; Origin is not the NRL, and picking a club side, no matter how successful without any variety in play will only lead to the continued disappointment of NSW fans.

Look at what happened in the final game of the series last year. Now it was a dead rubber, but Cam Murray is far more suited to the Origin game than Yeo, with his quick play the balls allowing the halves to play off the front foot.

Cody Walker’s involvement opened up the attack, leading to a more expansive style of football, resulting in him receiving man of the match.

Do you know who has received the most Man of the Match awards since 2018? That’s right, James Tedesco.

Tedesco has more Man of the Match awards than greats such as Greg Inglis, Billy Slater, Laurie Daley and Brad Fitter.

He did not have the best series last year, but alongside Cameron Munster, he has undisputedly been one of Origin’s best over the years.

He is just one year removed from finishing second in the Dally M voting and is still only 31 years old. The difference between Tedesco and Edwards has less to do with performance and more to do with expectations.

The Rooster is one of the all-time premier players in that position, whose resume is only surpassed by Billy Slater in the position. Edwards on the other hand rose from little fanfare to be a meaningful contributor to the greatest side of the modern era.

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But the grass isn’t always greener, and class is permanent.

Knee-jerk reactions to a couple of underwhelming performances despite a history of proven excellence will not help end Queensland’s joy but prolong it.

The Crowd Says:

2024-04-15T22:28:28+00:00

aerial lizard

Roar Rookie


Typical immature bullying cane toad crap, under a diaphonous veil of pseudo intelligence.

2024-02-19T19:55:50+00:00

Nat

Roar Guru


You instigated it, you got owned and with a childish "blah blah blah" you turn tail and retreat. This is what happens when you let your pride argue a point you cannot make.

2024-02-19T11:27:36+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


Blah, Blah, Blah… Wrong & proven to be wrong . As difficult as you find it to admit just that. :thumbup:

2024-02-19T09:02:46+00:00

Nat

Roar Guru


Ok, so your "next best" the next generation of talent the one who is older than the current #7 by 2 yrs? This is the same bloke picked and dropped in one NSW game? And just for clarification he was picked for 1 GF and didn't play a minute. Given his performance in finals and for state you can keep him as your "next best".

2024-02-19T08:25:25+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


Is that right. You made another grandiose statement about Walker having already done more & proven more. Than any next up NSW player has . Hynes has been part of 2 premiership winning teams. Provable- Summons Medal Winner twice. Daly M Medal winner . Played for NSW , Australia. Both Luai & Hynes to this point , have already done more that matters . Than even Mam has done. Way more than Walker has ever done . So much for your big statements.

2024-02-19T07:28:25+00:00

Nat

Roar Guru


Luai?!?!?! The bloke who has been carried his entire career? 100% would never have seen a blue jersey without Cleary and Freddy. Would never have seen A Aussie jumper at all. What did he lead exactly in the WC? Who wore the C for the Samoan WC? Wasn’t bloody Luai? Not even his own coach thinks he’s a leader and let him go.

2024-02-19T07:17:19+00:00

Nat

Roar Guru


“ A couple of veterans & a couple of ordinary halves.” The only thing ordinary is your opinion. I’ll lean on the opinion of those whose opinion is based on fact.

2024-02-19T06:43:26+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


I seem to remember Luai playing in 4 GF’s. Plus leading Samoa to a WC final. With 3 man of the match awards along the way in that WC. But, no no….playing in a PM’s 13 is good.

2024-02-19T06:08:05+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


My opinion is just wrong? You were making the big claim about how Queensland has great depth in all positions . Yet when asked about this great depth in the halves . You came up with one very good player. A couple of veterans & a couple of ordinary halves. At the same time as Queensland clubs have such great depth in the halves. That 2 of them have to purchase a veteran halfback from NSW. Another 1 has to purchase 2 halves from NSW. I guess you have the Titans doing their own thing. Obviously the depth isn’t too deep, despite your chuckles & protestations. Or they’d all have the next up great Queensland halfbacks playing for them now. Walker did get to play NSW Cup last season. That’s a feather in his cap for sure. :thumbup:

2024-02-19T04:44:13+00:00

Nat

Roar Guru


Baahahahahaha, yeah I’m the one who is without a clue. This coming from the judge claiming the next half is a rookie. “But but but look at the reserve grade…” Dearden: Already played origin and prelim finals. Walker: Rookie of the Year, played a Prelim and Semi as well as PM X111 and been in origin camp 3yrs now. In 3 years Walker has done more, won more and proven more then any of your next best. Dreams are free but your opinion is just wrong. Take the “L” buddy you have earned it.

2024-02-19T00:21:26+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


Dearden is ordinary , for the most part . Walker hasn’t proven anything, as yet . ( That’s why the Roosters have been going around buying promising future halves ). From the list you gave , Mam is the only top player in the halves up there. Besides the regular now veterans of DCE & Munster. Without the veteran Reynolds, Brisbane would still be trying every halfback around Queensland, looking for a halfback to guide the side around the park. Or looking for others from NSW. I hear plenty of Dolphins lovers saying how good they think Katoa is going to be. ( Thats why they signed him for longer ). Also why they had to buy him from Penrith. He’s just the start of the line of young halfbacks . Take an actual look at the very talented young halves coming through in NSW , plus NSW halves at the Warriors etc..As at the moment ,you’re just hitting out without a clue .

2024-02-18T21:15:35+00:00

Nat

Roar Guru


This from the guy who only has depth 3years older than Cleary. Who's next, Ilias? Dearden, Walker and Mam will be killing NSW long after Cleary is done.

2024-02-15T06:01:17+00:00

Stewy76

Roar Rookie


Queensland is hoping they pick him for another few years Albo :)

2024-02-15T02:00:53+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


Fogarty? I suppose Queensland won with Dearden, who was pretty ordinary for the Cowboys last season. So who knows? I think you’re reaching though, when you say depth. Especially if you mean in the halves. Tell us about the depth, when the Cowboys & Broncos stop buying veterans.

2024-02-15T01:51:07+00:00

Nat

Roar Guru


Behind DCE and Munny they have Dearden (already played), Walker has been in camp for 2yrs and now Dally M 5/8 in Mam. Further, you could put Fogarty with these boys and do a job. There’s a decade worth in those few.

2024-02-14T08:37:13+00:00

Busty McCracken

Roar Rookie


100% agree with you on Cam murray. Far greater footy minds than myself rate Yeo alot higher than I do so he's obviously a gun, but I'll take Cam over Yeo every day of the week at origin level. I'd also have him as my skipper. He should be a ..... lock for the position, pun absolutely bloody well intended

2024-02-14T08:12:14+00:00

blacktown leagues

Roar Rookie


There’s a Fullback in Melbourne who could have his eye on that spot. With a bit of good luck with injuries and a bit of confidence who knows

2024-02-14T08:04:52+00:00

Succhi

Roar Rookie


I think Teddy should lose the NSW captaincy. The captain needs to be in the front line, in the refs ear and directing play. Cam Smith has shown the way.

2024-02-14T07:41:16+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


Does Queensland have a lot of positional depth in the halves?

2024-02-14T07:06:55+00:00

Griffo 09

Roar Rookie


I think you’ve hit the nail on the head. Different players may offer different attributes in the same position, and the player you pick in that position may also impact the style of the team. But you pick one and make the best of it. In the case of Tedesco, are his key strengths waning, in which case, you might pick someone different who may have similar or different attributes. Another thing to consider is if ‘a fit Tommy Turbo’ is a likely prospect.

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