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RUGBY league's controversial representative eligibility guidelines will be overhauled to ensure there is no repeat of Greg Inglis's dubious defection to Queensland.
The Courier-Mail can reveal key figures from the NRL, Queensland Rugby League, NSWRL and New Zealand RL have discussed introducing beefed-up eligibility rules to avert the selection saga that allowed NSW-born Inglis to represent the Maroons.
The revamped guidelines are expected to be in place before this year's State of Origin series.
Inglis's selection for Queensland in 2006 sparked fury south of the Tweed when it emerged the centre, raised in the NSW town of Kempsey, had played his first senior game for NSW school Hunter Sports High.
Under the proposed new rules, however, the days of another NRL star pulling off a similar representative defection will be over.
At present, a player's State of Origin status is determined by where he played his first senior game after the age of 16.
But the code's officials have discussed a more thorough assessment process, with a player's eligibility to also be determined by where he went to school, where he played his junior football and, particularly in international cases, his parents' heritage.
Inglis, for example, would be declared a Blue under such a process. He was born in NSW and, barring a brief stint for Queensland's Wavell High at 16, played his junior football almost exclusively in NSW.
NSWRL chief executive Geoff Carr said he hoped the new guidelines would be in place for this year's representative season.
"We are in the process of getting people to look at the new guidelines to see if there are any holes in it. It isn't official yet but we are making an attempt to try and improve the way that works," Carr said.
"It's just a layer of different things which point to whether someone in the first instance is eligible for NSW or Queensland. "It's currently been where you have played your first game over the age of 16 but you could live in NSW for 15 years, play one game after 16 in Queensland and all of a sudden you are a Queenslander.
"Under the philosophy of the new guidelines, Greg Inglis for example would never have been deemed a Queenslander.
"We need to look at a range of things to determine eligibility, not just where you play your first senior game."
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