This perfect NSW play shows just how much trouble Queensland are in
The first job as the half, as Cleary did to Daly Cherry-Evans, is to target your opposite number and make him commit to you defensively.
You've got the ball in two hands, and you are just eye balling that three-defender and charging at him. You don't give him any other option but to commit to tackling you.
Once you feel him lock on, then your centre runs that really strong line angling from outside in. For NSW in Origin I, it was Stephen Crichton. For me in 2003, it was Matt Gidley.
I call it throwing the bait out with that angled run between the defending half and centre. You throw the double pump – which is your dummy to the centre – and it's the only time I ever premeditated who I was going to pass to. I always knew I'd be going out the back.
Do this quickly enough and the defensive winger is stranded with a two-on-one. Zac Lomax cruised over untouched a few weeks ago. Twenty-two years ago, my fullback Anthony Minichiello used his footwork to do the same.
The key to it all is making the defence think that you as a playmaker are going to run. That you're not even thinking about the pass. The quicker you get across and commit the three-man, the quicker you have his centre – Hamiso Tabuai-Fidow or Brent Tate – flying in.
The only way to defend this play is for the winger to be coming up and nailing your fullback, but that's a lot easier said than done. And it's a thing of beauty when you get it right.
How do Queensland stop the best NSW team in years?
As for the task ahead of the Maroons, there's rain around in Perth and when I visited the stadium on Monday night, it was quite a dewy surface – even when it was dry.
So the game plan, then, becomes about getting out of your own end with dummy-half running, short passes and a strong kicking game. That's exactly where NSW dominated Origin I.
Even with the loss of Mitchell Moses in the halves and Mitch Barnett up front, this is still a very stable side. Jarome Luai comes straight in alongside Cleary, who he knows better than any other player in rugby league, while Stefano Utoikamanu has been around Origin camps now for a few years.
This is one of the most well-balanced NSW teams I've seen in a long time, and with an average age of 27 you'd like to think they'll be together for a few series to come.
Queensland, on the other hand, have made four changes, among them dropping their halfback and captain.
Wednesday is a huge night for Tom Dearden with so much extra responsibility and pressure as he trades the No.14 jersey for the No.7.
I think Cam Munster and Kalyn Ponga will end up doing 90 per cent of Queensland's long kicking down their left edge. The big question mark for Dearden is the short kicking game. I really haven't seen him do too much of it for the Cowboys.
His biggest job, though, is to unlock Munster's running game, and in turn Munster has to bring Ponga onto the ball. Naming Cameron as captain is a masterstroke for mine.
We've seen him lift in the Origin arena so many times and when you think about leading his state as Queensland five-eighth, that Maroons No.6 jersey is one of the most famous jerseys in Australian sport. Wally Lewis, Darren Lockyer and Johnathan Thurston are among the greatest players in rugby league's history, and I'm sure Munster understands the responsibility that comes with wearing that jumper.
For Queensland's spine to get any traction and any hope of an upset, it's on Tino Fa'asuamaleaui, Mo Fotuaika, Trent Loiero and Harry Grant, and how they defend in the opening 20 minutes.
The Blues forwards dominated this forward battle in Origin I and won the ruck convincingly. If the same thing happens again, Queensland will be in serious trouble.
Again, if it's wet on Wednesday night, Brian To'o and Zac Lomax are so effective coming out of trouble, whereas Queensland need a lot more from their back five.
I'd love to see NSW use their edges – Angus Crichton and Latrell Mitchell on the left, and Liam Martin and Stephen Crichton on the right – once they hit their own 40-metre line when edge defence can be passive.
For Queensland to challenge the Blues, they need to do the same and throw caution to the wind. Munster and Ponga need to take some chances as the Maroons approach halfway, because they can obviously trouble any defence.
But the risk and reward of chancing your arm is such a fine line, particularly if a side is down on confidence.
Taking those risks is so much easier with momentum and I expect Grant will be looking to run at every opportunity given his quiet game a few weeks ago and the need for ruck speed. And again, that's all about the forward battle.
Loading
Gorden Tallis always got into me with his favourite saying, 'forwards win the game, the backs decide by how much'. That's even more important in Origin games.
To do that, Tino needs to take on his great mate Payne Haas like he did a few years ago. Both would be champion front-rowers in any era, and Tino needs to lead Queensland up front.
I think we'll get a different game to Origin I, and we might have quite a spiteful, physical contest because the Maroons are desperate and staring down four straight losses. It could bring Queensland right into the game, but again, that would need to be on their terms, with Fa'asuamaleaui dictating.
However the Maroons go about it, they've got to do something to break up the Blues rhythm. But this is such a quality NSW side, I just can't see it.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

The Age
2 hours ago
- The Age
‘Think how it would affect your kids': Champion's call against vile abuse
Upon her unveiling as the Brisbane Broncos co-captain, Ali Brigginshaw has issued a palpable message to those who have taken to social media in a series of vile attacks on players. 'My message is if you're writing a comment, think about how it would affect your kids or your partner at home, because they're the people it's affecting,' Brigginshaw warned. 'I can cop most things and try not to read them, but when you go home and see your family upset that's when it hits home.' This was the first chance Brigginshaw had taken to address the abuse she received following Queensland's defeat in the women's State of Origin series, with her wife revealing the family had received messages to 'kill themselves'. Incidents of threatening comments issued to New South Wales star Liam Wright and Newcastle winger James Schiller have followed, as Brigginshaw lamented 'it does happen to every player'. Loading The 35-year-old revealed she removed herself from social media for five weeks following the attacks, claiming it was 'probably the best five weeks I've had' and admitting she will likely do the same throughout the NRLW season. 'You can be flying and nothing will affect you, and then that day you wake up when things aren't going your way it can really affect you,' Brigginshaw said. 'I didn't expect to feel the way I did – I always see myself as quite a tough player and am able to cope with most challenge. But in the pressure and the moment I was in, it hit me hard.'

Sydney Morning Herald
2 hours ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
‘Think how it would affect your kids': Champion's call against vile abuse
Upon her unveiling as the Brisbane Broncos co-captain, Ali Brigginshaw has issued a palpable message to those who have taken to social media in a series of vile attacks on players. 'My message is if you're writing a comment, think about how it would affect your kids or your partner at home, because they're the people it's affecting,' Brigginshaw warned. 'I can cop most things and try not to read them, but when you go home and see your family upset that's when it hits home.' This was the first chance Brigginshaw had taken to address the abuse she received following Queensland's defeat in the women's State of Origin series, with her wife revealing the family had received messages to 'kill themselves'. Incidents of threatening comments issued to New South Wales star Liam Wright and Newcastle winger James Schiller have followed, as Brigginshaw lamented 'it does happen to every player'. Loading The 35-year-old revealed she removed herself from social media for five weeks following the attacks, claiming it was 'probably the best five weeks I've had' and admitting she will likely do the same throughout the NRLW season. 'You can be flying and nothing will affect you, and then that day you wake up when things aren't going your way it can really affect you,' Brigginshaw said. 'I didn't expect to feel the way I did – I always see myself as quite a tough player and am able to cope with most challenge. But in the pressure and the moment I was in, it hit me hard.'

The Age
3 hours ago
- The Age
Their season is in the balance. Inequities of NRL draw could tip Panthers over the edge
As well as the travel, there are also the short turnarounds to factor in. As Knights coach Adam O'Brien said after his team's recent loss to St George Illawarra, when he begrudgingly rested Kalyn Ponga so that the Queensland Origin star wasn't playing three games in eight days: 'In this battle, we lost to the scheduling and the draw. Whoever does the draws either hasn't lived it or doesn't care, so I don't know which one it is.' Some may have felt O'Brien's comments were a bit rich, given that a week earlier, the Knights had enjoyed the rub of the green, beating a Penrith side minus their five-man Origin contingent. Panthers coach Ivan Cleary copped that loss on the chin and was disappointed that his depleted team had been unable to give a better account of themselves. It's not in Cleary's unflappable nature to complain publicly or to create controversy but, after Penrith's 18-14 win against Wests Tigers two weeks ago, he made an exception. Cleary's concern was not the game the Panthers had just played, but the double whammy looming on the horizon, after his team's round 15 bye. First Penrith face the Warriors in Auckland on Saturday, barely 72 hours after their Origin stars – Nathan Cleary, Isaah Yeo, Brian To'o, Dylan Edwards and Liam Martin – were on duty with NSW in Perth. It's basically a day in transit from Western Australia to New Zealand, once time zones, connecting flights and layovers at airports are factored in. Not long enough, the coach said, to risk taking his NSW reps across the ditch. 'The Origin players won't be playing, because they can't,' he said. 'That's another story. I don't think it's fair. We should be able to make that decision. And just through flights, we can't get them there.' Front-rower Lindsay Smith, who was a stand-by player for NSW in Perth, is nonetheless expected to rack up some frequent flyer points and suit up for the Panthers on Saturday. Cleary found an unexpected ally in Phil Gould, formerly his mentor at Penrith before a well-documented falling-out. 'What about the ridiculous scheduling for the poor old Panthers this week?' Gould said on his Six Tackles With Gus podcast. 'They are playing on Wednesday night in Perth, all these Origin players … how would they expect those players to back up? It's terrible. If I was the Panthers club, I would be blowing up deluxe.' Gould may have been thinking two moves ahead, given the Panthers' next assignment after Auckland is the Canterbury club he oversees, on Thursday next week. Penrith's Origin quintet should be nicely freshened up for their clash with the table-topping Bulldogs, although Cleary was again disappointed with the scheduling, saying the rest of his players faced a five-day turnaround, which included the trip home from New Zealand. In recent seasons, Cleary has happily rested his Origin players during this phase of the season. In 2022, he gave seven state representatives the weekend off and their back-ups were too good for cellar-dwellers the Wests Tigers. A year later, Penrith beat the Knights with their five NSW players watching from the stand. This season, he doesn't have the same luxury as the reigning four-time champions face a dogfight to make the finals. And perhaps that is the crux of the issue. Loading We all realise the draw has flaws in it. NRL officials understand that, even though they are loath to publicly admit it. Instead, they try their best to juggle myriad complex issues and requests while keeping any inequities to a minimum. Impartial observers might form the view that it's all swings and roundabouts and that it usually evens itself out in the long run. That's all well and good until you're in Cleary's shoes, preparing for two tough games, five days apart in different countries, with your whole season potentially hanging on the outcome. Dynasties don't last forever. In Penrith's case, they can only hope the next two games don't prove to be the draw that broke the camel's back.