taxidriver
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NSW coach Laurie Daley has demanded a full report into the sub-standard performance of referees Shayne Hayne and Ashley Klein, who were yesterday accused of being intimidated at Suncorp Stadium.
Daley refused to be openly critical of Hayne and Klein but the Blues camp remains filthy at their performance, particularly after the first four penalties went to Queensland.
One source close to the NSW camp said: "Surely they won't be there for Origin III. If they are, you'd have to question (referees boss) Daniel Anderson's judgment."
NSW claim the pre-game interpretations were completely different to those handed out by Klein and Hayne on the field.
Asked for his opinion, Daley said: "I didn't think it was one of their better performances.
"We had no ball. Hopefully we might get the rub of the green when we get to Sydney. Queensland were good but I would still like a report of their performance. Daniel has a tough job and I'm sure he will make the right decision for game three."
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NSW halfback Mitchell Pearce questioned the consistency of referees and wondered whether Klein and Hayne were intimidated.
"They're not consistent at the moment," he said. "That's the frustrating thing that everyone is talking about.
"In an Origin game, if you are 4-0 (penalty count) at the start, even if it is evened-up, you lose all your field position."If you are any chance of winning you need to go set-for-set for the first 20 minutes with no penalties. When it's 4-0 down coming off your own line it's near impossible to beat them to be honest."
Asked was it frustrating, Pearce said: "It is. It seems to happen everytime. I'm not one to blame refs. I would be intimidated if I was a ref out there. It is the same in NSW."Blues skipper Paul Gallen conceded his side was never expecting any favours in Brisbane, where NSW have won just seven penalty counts in 50 matches.
"We knew it was going to happen, we wouldn't get the 50-50 calls," he said
Daley refused to be openly critical of Hayne and Klein but the Blues camp remains filthy at their performance, particularly after the first four penalties went to Queensland.
One source close to the NSW camp said: "Surely they won't be there for Origin III. If they are, you'd have to question (referees boss) Daniel Anderson's judgment."
NSW claim the pre-game interpretations were completely different to those handed out by Klein and Hayne on the field.
Asked for his opinion, Daley said: "I didn't think it was one of their better performances.
"We had no ball. Hopefully we might get the rub of the green when we get to Sydney. Queensland were good but I would still like a report of their performance. Daniel has a tough job and I'm sure he will make the right decision for game three."
.....................................
NSW halfback Mitchell Pearce questioned the consistency of referees and wondered whether Klein and Hayne were intimidated.
"They're not consistent at the moment," he said. "That's the frustrating thing that everyone is talking about.
"In an Origin game, if you are 4-0 (penalty count) at the start, even if it is evened-up, you lose all your field position."If you are any chance of winning you need to go set-for-set for the first 20 minutes with no penalties. When it's 4-0 down coming off your own line it's near impossible to beat them to be honest."
Asked was it frustrating, Pearce said: "It is. It seems to happen everytime. I'm not one to blame refs. I would be intimidated if I was a ref out there. It is the same in NSW."Blues skipper Paul Gallen conceded his side was never expecting any favours in Brisbane, where NSW have won just seven penalty counts in 50 matches.
"We knew it was going to happen, we wouldn't get the 50-50 calls," he said