State of Origin 2023 Game 2 live: Queensland Maroons v NSW ...

21 Jun 2023

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The teams are back out for the second half. Can NSW mount a comeback?

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Photo The Guardian

Here’s the DCE chase on Crichton that turned into a 10 or 12 point play. He saves at least four points with his tackle, one that immediately precedes his line break to set up Queensland’s second try.

NSW had more possession, more completions, more passes, more offloads… and rarely looked threatening. It’s like Origin I all over again. To make matters worse, when the Blues did penetrate the ball followed makeshift centre Damien Cook like a magnet and he was repeatedly the wrong man at the wrong time.

In case you’ve joined late, Cook has been pressganged into the backline after Trbojevic was forced off in the opening exchanges with a serious pec injury. Brad Fittler’s decision not to retain Nicho Hynes in his 17 is already beginning to look like a mistake.

James Hewer has emailed in, questioning Queensland’s second try. And I have to agree that Fifita’s pass to Tabuai-Fidow looks forward to my poorly trained eyes. Have a look below, make your own call.

Half-time: Queensland 10-0 NSW

The Maroons have been on the back foot for much of the half, but they are now just 40 minutes away from an Origin series victory.

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Photo The Guardian
Queensland supporters have had plenty to cheer about. Photograph: Jono Searle/AAP

39 mins: NSW should have one set in their own half before the break, but they benefit from a dangerous tackle and kick long downfield for one final assault for the half. Five tackles come and go in the shadow of the posts but there is zero penetration. On the last there’s a set restart – which just means two more ineffective tackles before the hooter. Queensland’s defence is phenomenal.

37 mins: Queensland go through hands on halfway but Walsh grasses the seventh or eighth pass in the move and NSW mop up. Again, it’s a moderate set, and it ends in ignominy with Collins wrapping Luai in a mighty pile-driving bear hug that dislodges the ball and brings Suncorp Stadium alive.

35 mins: What an extraordinary couple of minutes for Daly Cherry-Evans. His tackle save on Crichton will be on Origin highlights reels for decades, then he made the line break to create his side’s second try. Such a big game player. Going the other way, Damien Cook just cannot believe his predicament.

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Photo The Guardian
TRY! Queensland 10-0 NSW (Taulagi, 34)

After all that pressure from NSW, what do Queensland do? Carrigan makes a bust, DCE powers through the gap, and a tackle later the ball is shifted from right to left for Taulagi to complete the formalities. How do they do it? How do they always do it?

Holmes makes the simple conversion.

Murray Taulagi celebrates his try. Photograph: Bradley Kanaris/Getty Images

30 mins: The Maroons get just what they want with a set restart on halfway. Defence is now very much attack with DCE and Munster darting around behind the ruck. On the last the kick is smothered and Crichton is away! Can he make it 90 metres for the try!? Queenslanders are coming from all angles to chase! It’s a thrilling foot-race – and Cherry-Evans makes the desperate tackle! Wow. But NSW are not finished. They have a full set 20 metres out. There’s so much space on the left against a tired Queensland defence – but the ball doesn’t get there fast enough and the Maroons recover. They keep coming through – and now there’s space again on the left, surely this time, no! The pass from Luai hits Cook in the face! Oh no! This is nightmare stuff for NSW.

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Photo The Guardian
Jarome Luai. Photograph: Jono Searle/AAP

28 mins: NSW are pushing hard now! Little happened for five tackles, but on the last a poor Moses chip bounced back into Blue hands and drew a knock-on for a repeat set in the red zone. After steering everything down the left NSW look to the right and as Moses feeds Tedesco there’s room for To’o on the outside – but Taulagi flies out of the line to pressure the NSW skipper and his pass misses its target. That was a long long intense spell of pressure and Queensland emerge unscathed.

27 mins: Finally some respite! After a long long period of unbroken play – largely dominated by NSW – there’s a ruck infringement against Queensland after a long kick-chase, and everyone has a second to catch their breath.

26 mins: The Blues continue to probe. Crichton goes close, then there’s an overlap on the left – can they find it? No! Cook is the wrong man in the left centre and he’s crunched by a gang of Queenslanders when you’d have to think a fit Mitchell would have handed a try on a plate to Addo-Carr.

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Photo The Guardian

25 mins: That’s almost the moment of magic NSW need! Moses, on tackle one, spots Walsh out of position and chips and chases his own ball. Munster gets back to concede the drop-out just in time. Moses does not look overawed by the occasion.

24 mins: Wallop! Martin and Young absolutely pummel Coates a split-second after he fields the high ball. Munster’s then dumped in a tackle as the Blues push – but Nanai breaks the line and can launch a counter… but he bites off more than he can chew with a flick pass out of contact that’s too hot for Coates and NSW are back in attack.

22 mins: Moses has impressed me so far, looking to attack on the front foot, shaping to run whenever he receives the ball, buying him yards to finesse his kicks. There’s been no magic yet though with the Blues content to grind through the sets and bide their time.

Mitchell Moses pushes past Maroons players. Photograph: Chris Hyde/Getty Images

20 mins: NSW continue to enjoy good field position but they have yet to profit from Moses’s boot. His latest effort, high to the right, is won in the air by Crichton, but Fa’asuamaleaui is first to crumb the loose ball at ground level. The pace and flow of this contest is of a much higher intensity than Origin I. Already plenty of players look gassed.

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Photo The Guardian

18 mins: Superb defence from the Queensland line! NSW had A1 attacking position but time and again the Maroons not only won the one-on-one challenge but they did so with interest. Eventually, the grubber is secured by Munster who finds 10 metres from a crowded in-goal area to run the ball clear.

16 mins: Another massive DCE boot sets up a terrific chase at the end of a set highlighted by Fa’asuamaleaui and Frizell getting to know each other better. The Blues move the ball incrementally downfield for four tackles, then there’s some pathetic handbags at the ruck involving Flegler – and he concedes a dreadfully soft un-Origin penalty to invite the Blues onto attack.

14 mins: The Maroons are getting momentum with every set, and the kicking game is on point, looking for long early punts downfield to turn Tedesco and his wingers on their heel, inviting punishing chases.

12 mins: Nightmare start for NSW, losing an early try and Trbojevic. Damien Cook, normally a hooker, will have to play 75 minutes as a left centre. And Queensland are not letting them breathe easy, Munster almost nailing a 40-20.

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Photo The Guardian
TRY! Queensland 4-0 NSW (Holmes, 10)

Queensland make ground every tackle of the set following Luai’s poor kick, and by the last Cherry-Evans has time to loft a short iron to the right corner. The ball spills off fingers, hits the deck, and a Maroon jersey lands on the loose pill for an opportunistic try! Or is it? Ashley Klein reckons Coates knocked on in the aerial contest with Addo-Carr, so we’re going to the Bunker. Replay after replay is indeterminate until an angle is found to call the play on. Try time! Or is it? Valentine Holmes’s finish isn’t pretty. Was it a knock-on? No! Another line-ball call goes Queensland’s way and the home side hit the front!

Holmes clips the outside of the post with his conversion attempt from the right touchline.

Valentine Holmes scores a try early during game two. Photograph: Chris Hyde/Getty Images

8 mins: The second penalty of the night goes the way of NSW after Munster is pinged for slowing down Crichton at the ruck. That turns a set from their line to a territory-builder from halfway for the Blues. But it’s a set that lacks penetration, especially when Robson is fortunate not to knock on a fumble. Moses has looked bright early on and his dart from dummy half allows Luai to grubber from close range, but he overcooks and the balls dribbles dead.

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Photo The Guardian

Confirmation Tom Trbojevic is out for the night with a pec injury.

6 mins: Following that early burst both teams exchange midfield sets before To’o hammers into the Maroon line – and Cotter in particular - to create some go-forward. That sets up Moses to bomb from 40m out. His kick is allowed to bounce, but Queensland mop up.

4 mins: Queensland waste no time going through their repertoire, from left wing to right for a tackle, then back to the left where the Maroons have a glimmer out wide but Taulagi can’t get into the corner. In desperation Trbojevic has done himself a serious mischief! Is it a dislocated shoulder – or worse? Either way, it looks as though Turbo is done for the night and Damien Cook is on in the centres.

Tom Trbojevic is out early with a pec injury. Photograph: Darren England/AAP

2 mins: Paulo, To’o, Haas, Young and Tedesco all hit the line hard for NSW but Moses is forced to launch his first kick from inside his own half. Queensland make little ground for three tackles but Fifita makes his presence known on tackle four and Trbojevic coughs up a soft penalty at the ruck. The Maroons on the attack early.

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Photo The Guardian
Kick-off!

Origin II is underway. The Blues receive Reece Walsh’s kick-off. Can they keep the series alive at fortress Suncorp?

The pre-match formalities have been taken care of. On with the footy …

The Blues line up during before game two. Photograph: Jono Searle/AAP
Maroons stand for the anthem. Photograph: Jono Searle/AAP

And now the home side, top to toe in Maroon, like most of the 50-odd thousand Queenslanders inside Suncorp Stadium.

Reece Walsh runs out with the Maroons. Photograph: Jono Searle/AAP

First out on to the arena are the Blues, led by James Tedesco, and they are met with a cacophony of boos and catcalls. The Blues are more recognisable tonight in their sky blue uniform after Origin one’s navy affair.

Of course, not everyone was booing. Photograph: Darren England/AAP

Wally Lewis and Darren Lockyer emerge from the gloom to parade the State of Origin shield. We are the Champions gets an airing on the PA system. Queensland relishing the opportunity to showcase their status. Could it be hubris?

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Photo The Guardian

The lights are down at Suncorp Stadium. The two teams are going through their final drills in the sheds. We’ll be underway in about ten minutes.

Just enough time before kick-off for this nice read from Gavin Willacy about the growth of rugby league Stateside.

The NRL’s priority in the US seems to be more about cashing in on gambling revenue with no mention yet of developing the local game.

Have you ever seen Succession’s Roman Roy and Queensland’s Cameron Munster in the same room at the same time?

“Can anything upstage what happened on day five of the Ashes last night?” wonders David Ritchie. I doubt it, but hopefully there’s more action in the 8-10pm region than we saw through the Birmingham rain yesterday!

Gideon Suvio is tuning in from PNG and he wants to wish the Blues all the best for tonight’s game.

Series referee Ashley Klein had plenty of whistleblowing to do in South Australia. Hopefully tonight the two sets of players allow the game to flow.

Referee Ashley Klein speaks to James Tedesco of the Blues during game one of the 2023 State of Origin series. Photograph: Cameron Spencer/Getty Images

It’s cool and dry and still in Brisbane this evening. In other words, perfect rugby league playing conditions.

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Photo The Guardian
Queensland, beautiful one day, perfect the next. Photograph: Darren England/AAP

You’re not imagining it, Queensland do tend to win when its tight.

Queensland have a success rate of 51% in Origin games decided by seven points or more, but that jumps to 59% in games decided by six points or fewer. With nearly half of the 126 Origin games decided by these small margins, the Maroons’ ability to clinch tight games is a key reason for their dominance.

Do the Maroons have a game two hoodoo?

They haven’t won the second match of an Origin series since 2017. Extended further, it’s nine defeats in the past 12 round two encounters.

However, the Blues have only once won game two at Suncorp after losing the series opener, and Queensland have won eight of the past 10 Origin clashes at their HQ.

NSW XVII

Brad Fittler was forced into a huge decision when Nathan Cleary’s hamstring pinged, and he has overlooked the merits of Dally M medallist Nicho Hynes and Suncorp specialist Adam Reynolds in favour of Eels halfback Mitchell Moses. Hynes misses the squad altogether, making way for Reece Robson to offer more versatility in the pack off the bench. He will dovetail at hooker with the recalled Damien Cook. Cameron Murray and Liam Martin were under injury clouds in the build up but both have been passed fit.

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Photo The Guardian

Fittler is backing his Blues to rebound from their disappointment in Adelaide, especially skipper James Tedesco who was shown up by Roosters clubmate Lindsay Collins late on. “I think the moment at the end of the game was most probably embarrassing for him and embarrassment is a pretty good motivator,” Fittler said.

NSW: 1 James Tedesco, 2 Brian To’o, 3 Stephen Crichton, 4 Tom Trbojevic, 5 Josh Addo-Carr, 6 Jarome Luai, 7 Mitchell Moses, 8 Junior Paulo, 17 Reece Robson, 10 Payne Haas, 11 Tyson Frizell, 12 Hudson Young, 13 Isaah Yeo

Interchange: 14 Stefano Utoikamanu, 15 Cameron Murray, 16 Liam Martin, 9 Damien Cook

IN: Mitchell Moses, Damien Cook, Stefano Utoikamanu, Reece RobsonOUT: Nathan Cleary, Tevita Pangai Junior, Api Koroisau, Nicho Hynes

Four fresh faces in the NSW 17. Photograph: Dan Himbrechts/AAPQueensland XVII

Billy Slater has been forced into three changes due to injury. In the pack, Jai Arrow and Tom Gilbert are replaced by Jeremiah Nanai and Moeaki Fotuaika, while out wide Xavier Coates comes in for Selwyn Cobbo.

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Photo The Guardian

“We have had to make a few changes through injury, so it’s not as if we are just rolling out the same side again,” Slater said during the week. “We have got the new boys up to speed and we’ve just tried to apply ourselves at training. It’s been a good week.”

Queensland: 1 Reece Walsh, 2 Xavier Coates, 3 Valentine Holmes, 4 Hamiso Tabuai-Fidow, 5 Murray Taulagi, 6 Cameron Munster, 7 Daly Cherry-Evans, 15 Tom Flegler, 9 Ben Hunt, 10 Tino Fa’asuamaleaui, 11 David Fifita, 16 Reuben Cotter, 13 Pat Carrigan.

Interchange: 14 Harry Grant, 8 Lindsay Collins, 12 Jeremiah Nanai, 17 Moeaki Fotuaika

IN: Moeaki Fotuaika, Jeremiah Nanai, Xavier CoatesOut: Jai Arrow, Selwyn Cobbo, Tom Gilbert

Jeremiah Nanai returns to the heat of Origin battle. Photograph: Bradley Kanaris/Getty Images

As Nick Tedeschi writes, tonight’s clash could be the defining game in Brad Fittler’s coaching career.

The Blues have started favourites in every one of Fittler’s games since he took over in 2018, yet the coach is 8-8 over that time with two series losses. He has been strongly criticised for some questionable selections decisions – Josh Addo-Carr’s omission in 2022 was widely disparaged – and admitted prior to this year’s series opener that he was taking some unnecessary risks. Those risks did not pay off.

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Photo The Guardian
Preamble

Jonathan Howcroft

Hello everybody and welcome to live coverage of State of Origin Game 2 between Queensland’s Maroons and New South Wales’s Blues. Kick-off at Suncorp Stadium is not before 8.05pm (AEST).

Three weeks ago the Maroons did what the Maroons do and demonstrate that Queensland is not a place but a state of mind. Unfancied and outplayed for much of Origin I, Billy Slater’s mob turned it on when it mattered to take a series lead to fortress Suncorp.

The narrative since Adelaide has been all about the Blues. NSW selection, strategy, and execution have all been questioned. Why have so many key players underperformed so often? How do they fail repeatedly to get over the line when it matters? Whereto now for Brad Fittler?

Changes were demanded of the Blues but Fittler’s plans have been thrown into disarray with two cruel injury blows. Halfback Nathan Cleary has been ruled out of the remainder of the series with a hamstring injury, while Latrell Mitchell, the man expected to provide the spark, has not yet fully recovered from the complaint that ruled him out of the series opener. In their own ways each are impossible to replace and not what Fittler needed heading to a venue where his side has lost twice as much as it has won.

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Photo The Guardian

Queensland are not without their own issues, but they have not come with the same psychodrama. The risk for the Maroons tonight is how they cope with the unfamiliar status of favourites – expected to seal a third series in four years – when their trademark footy has emerged with their backs against the wall.

If you want to get in touch at any point you can always send me an email or pop a tweet to @JPHowcroft. On with the show.

You come at the king, you best not miss. Photograph: Bradley Kanaris/Getty Images
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Photo The Guardian
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