Saturday, December 21, 2024

‘Nowhere near Origin level’: Four calls Madge must make to save Blues — Paul Crawley

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If the NSW Blues led by coach Michael Maguire are fair dinkum about saving this State of Origin series they need to stop wasting energy complaining about this nonsense argument in defending Joseph Suaalii for a so-called controversial send off, and focus on the problems they can fix.

And that starts with Maguire bringing out the axe and making four extremely tough yet crucial selection calls for game two in the wake of what backfired in the thumping 38-10 loss to Queensland on Wednesday night:

— At the top of the to-do list is Parramatta playmaker Mitchell Moses must come in for the disappointing Nicho Hynes

— Wests Tigers skipper Api Koroisau also must be reinstated to tag team with Reece Robson at dummy half, because there is no question the Blues lacked creativity around the ruck (even allowing for Robson’s phenomenal defensive effort).

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— If Panthers fullback Dylan Edwards recovers from the quad injury that ruled him out of game one, he also should replace James Tedesco.

— And last but by no means least Maguire needs to go cap in hand back to Latrell Mitchell and get the Rabbitohs superstar on board to replace Suaalii, who is now looking at a four-game ban after being rightfully slugged with a grade two reckless high tackle charge.

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ORIGIN NEWS

FULL TIME: Maroons blow Blues away after historic send-off as NSW gamble backfires

NSW PLAYER RATINGS: Teddy’s brutal miss, new Blues cult hero erupts

QLD PLAYER RATINGS: DCE’s perfect statement as Hammer blitz seals Slater call

The honeymoon for the Blues new coach well and truly ended the moment fulltime sounded at Accor Stadium.

The Blues were not only blown off the park by Queensland’s onfield performance, but hindsight has shown Maguire was also beaten in the selection room battle with Billy Slater, who was proven yet again to be a genius with his controversial selection of Selwyn Cobbo in the aftermath of Reece Walsh being illegally knocked out of the match by Suaalii.

While the Blues played brave, they lacked direction, the kicking game wasn’t up to scratch, they missed too many one-on-one tackles and blew a stack of attacking chances, while it was only uncharacteristic handling errors by the Maroons that kept NSW in the contest for as long as they did.

That is the scary thing about this Queensland victory, because there is a hell of a lot of improvement left in them heading into game two in Melbourne if they get it right.

Even allowing for the Blues playing almost the entire match a man down, Hynes’s game management was just nowhere near what is required at Origin level, and his kicking game fell a long way short, while he also never threatened with his running game.

By no means is this a bash up on Hynes because he is a young man with an outstanding character that everyone in the game wanted to see succeed.

‘I’m super proud of their efforts’ | 07:37

But picking Origin sides is also not a popularity contest and bringing in Moses is a no-brainer.

There’s just no way of hiding from the reality that the fears leading into the game about Hynes’ ability to handle the pressure that goes with wearing the NSW No 7 jumper were exposed in full view of everyone.

With Nathan Cleary sidelined for the series, Moses is the man to replace Hynes on the back of the fact the Parramatta star No 7 has one of the biggest and best kicking games in the business, while Moses also poses a threat every time he touches the ball.

If for unforeseen circumstances Moses becomes unavailable between now and the team announcement, Jarome Luai should then be moved from five-eighth to halfback with Matt Burton and his booming boot taking over as Luai’s halves partner.

You could also make a case for Burton to be selected on the bench regardless to cover a backline casualty like the Maroons did with Cobbo. But given the Blues pack is not as mobile as Queensland’s, it would be a gamble only having two forwards unless there are further changes to the bench rotation given Koroisau has to be selected.

While Robson was incredibly brave and kept turning up time and again with huge defensive plays, Queensland’s one-two punch of Ben Hunt and Harry Grant showed us exactly what the Blues were missing by not selecting Koroisau in the first place.

As tough a call as it also is, Tedesco must make way for Edwards.

‘Pretty humble’: How QLD celebrated win | 01:05

Even though Tedesco had some good moments it was still a long way short of his greatest Origin performances, and it certainly wasn’t enough to warrant him staying in the team given Edwards was initially named ahead of him before being ruled out.

The other selection that will cause plenty of debate even though it is not an argument relates to the game’s most polarising player.

Say what you want Mitchell and his form for the Rabbitohs this season, but he is still the most destructive force at the Blues disposal _ and the player Queensland would least like to see come in to replace Suaalii.

SUAALII BLOW-UP IS ‘UNBELIEVABLE’

Now to the Suaalii send off and the debate about whether it was the right or wrong call from referee Ashley Klein.

I can’t believe the blow up coming from former greats, fans and also Michael Maguire.

We are no longer living in the 1990s and that type of dangerous high tackle should be a send off every day of the week in the modern game where preventing avoidable head injuries is paramount, regardless of if it happens in club footy or State of Origin.

Maguire was among the many who thought the Blues were hard done by when he pointed out the NRL’s lack of consistency post match, referring to when Walsh suffered a fractured eye socket in a club game earlier this season after a brutal head clash with the Panthers’ Taylan May, for which May was sin binned but not sent off.

The fact is two wrongs don’t make a right and the moment Suaalii connected with high and forceful contact he had initiated his own game of rugby league Russian roulette.

Yes, trying to predict how the referees and match review committee will react to dangerous high tackles is like picking the Lotto numbers.

That said, it is no use complaining when a defender flies out of the line to put on a big shot and things go pear-shaped.

‘A massive call in a game like this!’ | 00:58

It is the defender’s obligation to show a duty of care and even though Walsh slipped into the tackle, it is Suaalii’s responsibility not to make contact with the head regardless.

Can you imagine the blow up from Blues fans if that tackle had occurred on James Tedesco or Nicho Hynes and they were knocked out of the game while the defending player escaped with a sin bin?

There was a less dangerous tackle on Tedesco last season from Parramatta’s Bailey Simonsson that had Trent Robinson fuming that it was only a sin bin, while Suaalii’s tackle was probably closer to the sickening shot from Latrell Mitchell on Joey Manu in 2021 that caused all sorts of outrage after Manu suffered a fractured eye socket.

If you remember that incident Manu had also dipped after having his shorts tugged by then Rabbitohs centre Dane Gagai, which ultimately led to Mitchell smashing Manu in the head.

But the majority of people back then slammed Mitchell for his reckless intentions, yet on this occasion Suaalii is almost seen as the victim because it is an Origin game and he was on debut.

It’s a ridiculous argument.

The fact is Queensland lost their best player through no fault of his own for almost the entire game, and we still don’t know if the young Broncos superstar will suffer ongoing effects even though Walsh passed his head injury assessment after leaving the field.

It was obvious from the get-go the Blues had gone out to bash Walsh and this was not an accident, it was a reckless and avoidable tackle and Suaalii and the Blues have paid the price for their obvious intentions.

DCE ADDS TO ORIGIN GREATNESS

There was a time when even Queensland fans were off Daly Cherry-Evans. But the way this bloke has fought back to prove himself over the course of his career as not only a great player but a wonderful leader will see him go down as one of the Maroons greatest champions.

And DCE thoroughly deserved the man of the match award even though Hamiso Tabuai-Fidow and Ben Hunt weren’t far behind.

DCE’s player of the match honours | 01:51

While the Hammer finished with a hat-trick while also making some tremendous try saving tackles, Hunt also had a blinder in his two-try performance to show why he deserved to start ahead of Harry Grant (who could be accused of over-playing his hand on occasions).

But they got it spot on giving the award to DCE who was tough defensively, set up a couple of tries with magic plays, while producing a match defining 40/20 kick to boot.

Pat Carrigan was another who really stood tall for Queensland and looks to be Cherry-Evans’ natural successor at some point down the track, although at 35 DCE doesn’t look close to the finish line.

The Blues also had some gutsy performers led by backrowers Angus Crichton, Liam Martin, Stephen Crichton and Zac Lomax, while Spencer Lenui was an absolute handful off the bench.

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