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Origin Game 3

Crush

Coach
Messages
11,545
Hunt played a methodical game - knew when to pass and when to kick and he tackled his heart out . Norman was he usual self - taking it all in his stride , all in all played quite well , also setting up the maroons first try . 8/10 to both players .
Hopefully they come back to the gong now and concentrate on the Raiders this weekend and finishing the season on a high.
 

Gareth67

First Grade
Messages
8,845
Hopefully they come back to the gong now and concentrate on the Raiders this weekend and finishing the season on a high.

Likewise Crush , all the Dragons reps played so well that it would be great for them to continue on in that vain.
 

possm

Coach
Messages
16,037
Hunt played a methodical game - knew when to pass and when to kick and he tackled his heart out . Norman was he usual self - taking it all in his stride , all in all played quite well , also setting up the maroons first try . 8/10 to both players .
It was great to see a Blues win and very pleasing to see a Norman short kick as the try assist for Qld's first try and Paul Vaughan scoring NSW's first try. Oh, for a proper head coach at SGI!
 
Last edited:

BLM01

Coach
Messages
10,000
Bit harsh you guys comparing a normal NRL club game (like the Dragons) to a SOO team...and as is always in recent years since Bill Harrigan... officiated differently.
Yeh it was an exciting game to watch (mainly 2nd half) but the Blues nearly choked and lost a game from what should of been a unloseable position.
Tyson (thanks to our coach) still has not learnt you cant run people off the ball from last week.
Apart from individual brilliance from Cook & Teddy (boy and what a player - 700K a year my arse) and one of my favourites Cam Murray I thought the Blues attack was boring and lacked punch except for Fergo.
Our front row in the first 20 minutes as our attack were a bit flat footed.....actually our first half failed to get to 3rd gear in attack and defence.
Is KLEM an official knee lifter aka Craig Smith....no one even raises it now.(sorry for the pun)..it used to be against the rules.

Hunt was solid all game I thought both attack and defence but still a better half than hooker.
Norman started strong but wilted in the 2nd half as far as grabbing the game by the scruff. Norman had his chance to pull off a Scott Sattler on Fergo near the end but could not rise to the moment.
He made a few poor defensive misses in the 2nd half (but not alone) and butchered a try doing a Mundine at 20-8 when he went alone..lucky McGuire saved him
Frizz was very quiet in attack but there in defense and worked hard being around cleaning up and supporting
Vaughan good for his shortish minutes.
Tariq look good with a coat on.
 

getsmarty

Immortal
Messages
34,503
New faces shine but errors and fatigue prove too much for Maroons
Author
Margie McDonald Senior Reporter
Timestamp
Wed 10 Jul 2019, 10:29 PM
mcdonaldmargie-head.png

Queensland were going for their 60th match win, their 22nd Origin series victory and a ninth Origin decider, but they simply ran out of puff in trying to chase all that down.

The Maroons also had trouble trying to shut down James Tedesco, Damien Cook and Blake Ferguson at ANZ Stadium.

For a match locked up at 8-8 at half-time and 20-20 three minutes from full-time, it just slipped through Queensland's fingers in the final phases.

After having by far the better opening 40 minutes, even if they did concede seven first-half penalties, the Queenslanders created and absorbed several errors which swung the momentum of the game in the Blues' favour.

In the 43rd minute right centre Will Chambers ran 25 metres deep into NSW territory but then knocked on under the jolting tackle of Jack Wighton. His skipper Daly Cherry-Evans was on the inside unmarked.



McGuire gives the Maroons hope

Then Michael Morgan kicked out on the full. Then Morgan was knocked out cold due to an accidental elbow from Josh McGuire in trying to tackle Tedesco.

Interchange forward David Fifita came on, but then one of the Maroons best in Felise Kaufusi gave away a penalty (hand in the ruck) on the fifth tackle. Tedesco scored the Blues' second try to break the 8-8 deadlock from half-time.

From then on – with the Blues running at 55% possession – the Queenslanders were starting to look fatigued.



Norman perfectly places a kick for Kaufusi

The fact Cook was able to run a weaving, 40-metre-line evading Fifita and fullback Cameron Munster to score proved just how much.

The score scooted out to 20-8 but then the Queenslanders must have remembered the sign on the top of the banner they ran through from the players' tunnel: 'More Than A Jersey'.

McGuire scored with nine minutes left on the clock and Josh Papalii five minutes later and the Queensland tank had been replenished with fuel.

But then it was Ferguson and Tedesco's turn to put on the after-burners.

So the second half-slip came through some handling errors and ineffective tackles creeping in. After a 100% completion rate in the first-half (18 from 18) Queensland dropped to 83% and missed 49 tackles to NSW's 36.

The extra spring in the Blues' step came was evident in seven line breaks to the Maroons' four.

It seemed cruel for a Queensland side where Papalii, Munster and debutants Corey Norman and Ethan Lowe stood out with Cherry-Evans everywhere he could be.

In the end perhaps it was just too much change for Queensland to handle.

There were four personnel changes since the game two 38-6 drubbing in Perth, with Kalyn Ponga (calf), Matt Gillett (groin) gone through injury, and forwards Dylan Napa, Jarrod Wallace just gone.

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Best photos from State of Origin III


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Matt Burton scores for NSW in the under 20s State of Origin.
nsw-under-20-s-2gp_9026.jpg

Best photos from State of Origin III

Then there were the two positional changes to the spine – debutant Norman in at five-eighth and regular No.6 Munster to fullback.

Then there was three team changes an hour before kick-off – centre Morgan to the bench, utility Moses Mbye to left centre and Lowe from 18th man to the second row.

Lowe was on a trajectory few have trodden in Origin.

He went from being a reserve to a possible bench spot, through Gillett's injury, to the starting 17. And he did all that while playing his first game in a Maroons.

Did we mention Lowe also had the goal-kicking duties with Ponga absent. He didn't miss with four from four.

Coach Kevin Walters all week had been talking about "trust and belief these players have in each other". He said that Sunday's final training session in Brisbane before the team travelled to Sydney was the most intense he'd seen all series.

He said his players had one mission "make Queenslanders proud".

Queensland didn't get the chocolates but they restored a fair bit of pride.


https://www.dragons.com.au/news/201...rrors-and-fatigue-prove-too-much-for-maroons/
 

getsmarty

Immortal
Messages
34,503
Last-gasp try sees NSW win Origin series over Maroons
Author
Michael Chammas Chief Reporter
Timestamp
Wed 10 Jul 2019, 11:04 PM
chammas-michael-head.png

Finally, a NSW miracle.

Twenty-five long years after Mark Coyne broke NSW's hearts in the dying minutes, the Blues have got their revenge.

James Tedesco, take a bow.

The NSW No.1, the player of the series, finished off the lead up work of Mitchell Pearce and Blake Ferguson to give NSW back-to-back series wins for the first time in 14 years.

In the previous seven deciders, the Blues fell short.

Seven times they tried. Seven times they failed. And for many of those losses, the No.7 was to blame.

This was final game of the series. The final chance for both teams.

For Mitchell Pearce, his final shot at redemption.

The most maligned man in State of Origin history, walked down the seemingly never-ending Blues tunnel to the field with more to lose than gain.

So it was only fitting the punching bag of Origin would throw the pass with the game on the line that would provide NSW with the chance to break the hearts of millions north of the border.


Match: Blues v Maroons

Game 3 - Wednesday 10th July

Full Time

Home Team

Blues

Scored 26 points

Away Team

Maroons

Scored 20 points

Venue: ANZ Stadium

Match broadcasters:

  • Nine Network
With the scores level and only seconds on the clock, Pearce found the ball in his hand.

With the defensive line swarming in, you wouldn't have blamed him given the scars of yesteryear if he went for the safe play.

But he pulled the trigger. Said goodbye to the demons that have haunted him and threw an all-or-nothing cut-out pass over the top of the Queensland defence to put Tom Trbojevic and Blake Ferguson into open space.

Ferguson flirted with the touchline, but turned it back on the inside to Tedesco to do the rest.



Pearce soaks up first series win

The odds were stacked against Queensland from well before the whistle, but someone forget to tell them that.

The energy in Queensland's defence in Perth was virtually non-existent, but two weeks later they swarmed NSW like termites to timber.

Walters used profanities to describe his side's opening to game two, and he wouldn't have been pleased to see his side barely making it five metres from their line from the kick off.

Those frustrations would have been amplified when the Maroons conceded back-to-back penalties to gift the Blues an early 2-0 lead.

However it didn't take long for the Maroons to take the ascendancy, with debutant Corey Norman showing his deft touch with his less favoured foot to roll one behind the Blues and set up Felise Kaufusi for the first try of the night.

The referees were far more involved in the contest than they had been in previous games this year, blowing 10 penalties in the first 28 minutes – the last leading to a Queensland penalty goal to extend their advantage to six points.



Grateful Ferguson reflects on rocky road after series win

NSW were struggling to get themselves into the contest, however a runaway James Tedesco gave them their first real attacking raid of the night, allowing Paul Vaughan to crash over from close range to level the scores on the stroke of half time.

Unfortunately for Queensland, Michael Morgan's night came to an abrupt end early in the second half when he fell victim to some friendly fire, copping a stray elbow to the head from teammate Josh McGuire.

Morgan came into the game under a cloud having copped a heavy concussion against the Dragons leading into selection, with his latest setback expected to see him miss an extended period under the NRL concussion guidelines.

The Maroons were knocked again soon after when the brute strength and sheer speed of James Tedesco saw him carry two Queensland defenders over the line to give the Blues somewhat of an underserved lead.

The Maroons threw everything at the Blues for the first 53 minutes, yet somehow Fittler's men were on the right side of a 14-8 score line.

Suddenly, the pendulum swung. Just like that, NSW went from the brink of failure to total control.

On the back of a strong run from David Klemmer, Damien Cook took advantage of some tired Queensland defence, hitting the afterburners as he stood up Munster to score a special individual try.

nsw-blues-celebrate-the-win-1gp_8585.jpg

Best photos from State of Origin III

And just like that NSW led 20-8 with a quarter of the match remaining.

Gaps turned into giant Queensland holes, and their hands began to fail them. NSW had their foot on the throat, but with the shield in sight, released the pressure.

In typical Queensland fashion, they didn't die wondering. So when Josh McGuire slipped through some tired NSW defence to score, the Blues were to left to wonder if history was about to repeat itself.

The demons of yesteryear grew even louder soon after when Ethan Lowe charged down a Maloney kick, setting up for Daly Cherry-Evans to put Josh Papalii over for a try which was converted by Lowe to level things up with two minutes remaining.

It looked certain Queensland would do it again. It looked done, done, done.

But in Origin, you learn to expect the unexpected.


https://www.dragons.com.au/news/2019/07/10/last-gasp-try-sees-nsw-win-origin-series-over-maroons/
 

getsmarty

Immortal
Messages
34,503
Blues crush Maroons in Under-20s Origin
Author
Alicia Newton NRL.com Reporter
Timestamp
Wed 10 Jul 2019, 07:14 PM
newtonalicia-head.png

Penrith under-20s playmaker Matt Burton has starred with two tries to help guide NSW to a crushing 36-10 victory over Queensland in the Origin curtain-raiser at ANZ Stadium on Wednesday evening.

NSW led the Maroons 16-4 at the break in a fairly even contest despite the scoreline suggesting otherwise, until the Blues ran away in the second half with a further three tries to Matt Croker, Ky Rodwell and Ethan Parry.

Roosters hooker Sam Verrills proved a constant threat out of dummy half and also defended strongly around the ruck in a solid display.

Burton got the Blues on the board in the ninth minute when he chased his own grubber and pounced on the loose ball after a mistake in-goal by the Maroons.

hoy_rc1_6494.jpg

Blues fullback Tex Hoy. :copyright:Robb Cox/NRL Photos
The Maroons hit back through fullback Ronaldo Mulitalo, who weaved his way past Stephen Crichton to plant the ball down in the corner.

Burton, who collected man of the match honours, had his double after 23 minutes and the Blues had all the momentum.

Queensland had started well enough and knocked back the chance for an early penalty goal to go in search of a try but they were denied by a gallant Blues defensive line.



Burton scores first for New South Wales

The visitors struggled to gain any momentum back once the Blues got on a roll.

On the back of Burton's second try the Blues extended their lead before halftime when Verrills stayed on his feet before placing a well-timed kick for captain Teig Wilton to dive on in-goal.

An error from Maroons winger Treymain Spry saw both sides resume hostilities as the Blues edged further ahead via a penalty goal stretching the lead out to 18-4.



Burton breaks through and sets up Croker

Tries to Croker and Rodwell in the space of four minutes ensured the Blues would have a comfortable final 18 minutes on home turf as they avenged last year's 30-12 loss at Suncorp Stadium.

Queensland fought back with a consolation try on the stroke of fulltime through Cowboys product Murray Taulagi but the Mark O'Meley-coached Blues had the game well and truly in hand by that stage.


Match: NSW U20s v QLD U20s

Round 1 - Wednesday 10th July

Full Time

Home Team

NSW U20s

Scored 36 points

Away Team

QLD U20s

Scored 10 points

Venue: ANZ Stadium

Match broadcasters:

  • NRL.COM


https://www.dragons.com.au/news/2019/07/10/blues-crush-maroons-in-under-20s-origin/
 

Gareth67

First Grade
Messages
8,845
It was great to see a Blues win and very pleasing to see a Norman short kick as the try assist for Qld's first try and Paul Vaughan scoring NSW's first try. Oh, for a proper head coach at SGI!

We should put just a little of our pension cheque aside every fortnight possum and we may be able to contribute to a new coach .
 

RufusRex

Post Whore
Messages
63,991
So NSW with scores level take a kick off and dont kick it to Hunt? Only thing i can think of was that he was defending on the 10m line. But hooker typically sets up deep so he is there for DH on the first play.

Didnt matter, they won anyway so all good but surely you test out those demons dont you?
 

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