NSW nearly lost Cleary and Moses to injury. Who are the halves next in line?
Isaiya Katoa continues to earn rave reviews for his displays at the Dolphins, especially as the club has run up some big scores in recent weeks.
Immortal Andrew Johns has publicly praised Katoa on several occasions for the way he plays straight and regularly digs into the line, already anointing him Cleary's long-term NSW No.7 successor.
When asked about the 21-year-old being parachuted into Origin III at Accor Stadium in the event of any fresh injuries, Johns said on Nine's Immortal Behaviour: 'Katoa is special. I worry about his age. He'd handle it, but you don't want to burn him too early. Coming in with the series on the line is a lot of pressure. [Queenslander] Tom Dearden got it done coming into game two … [but] on the back of eight [first-half] penalties.'
NSW coach Laurie Daley is also a fan of Katoa, but it is unlikely he would throw a 21-year-old in for his Origin debut in an all-or-nothing decider.
Dolphins coach Kristian Woolf has worked with Katoa for several years, including with the Tongan Test team, and while he knows Katoa is in wonderful form he is also mindful of keeping a lid on the hype.
'He's an exceptional young man, I love the way he carries himself, the way he goes about his work in terms of wanting to be the best player he can be – and how hard he works at that – and his calm nature,' Woolf said.
'He's calm around the club, he's calm on the field, and that's why he's getting better each week.'
New Zealand Warriors playmaker Luke Metcalf is enjoying a breakout season and currently sits in the top half of contenders in the Dally M race, but was struggling with what looked like a quad injury in the late stages of yesterday's defeat to Penrith. Like Katoa, he would find it a big ask to play his first Origin game with everything at stake.
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The same line of thinking would also be why Canterbury recruit Lachie Galvin would not be considered, even though he is a future Blue in the making.
Broncos captain Adam Reynolds has played Origin in the past and was just last week weighing up a move to the Tigers, where he would have joined Luai.
Thankfully for the Blues and Daley, Cleary, Burton and Luai will have all finished their NRL commitments by next Friday night. Hopefully, this debate is not being had this time next week.

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The Age
an hour ago
- The Age
Labuschagne in the nets, Smith in New York
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Sydney Morning Herald
an hour ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
Labuschagne in the nets, Smith in New York
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The Age
4 hours ago
- The Age
‘I'm proper sorry': Spencer breaks silence on apology to Mam
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He did it as part of an education process most fathers do with their sons when meeting someone of note. There is also more to Woods' branding of Slater as a 'grub' than just Slater's at-times questionable actions as a player. The worst was not his physical actions on the field but his take-down of former Knights forward Cory Paterson, who had suffered from depression, during a game in 2010. His on-field comments at the time showed zero empathy towards those battling mental health issues. Woods was also defending Spencer Leniu, the NSW prop branded a 'grub' on the front page the Courier-Mail. That didn't sit well with Woods as people don't realise Leniu and Woods became friendly on a promotional trip to the United States. Woods, Leniu, Campbell Graham and Billy Walters were sent by the NRL in late 2023 to whip up interest in the Las Vegas experiment before the first matches at Allegiant Stadium. Woods didn't know Leniu before the trip but got to know and respect him over the week they spent in the States. He had Leniu's back and while not everyone liked the attack on Slater, at least he owned it. In the end, Slater's side won game two and that's what matters to him as a coach. Zero chill: To'o's pocket rocket fuel If you want hard proof of Brian To'o 's incredible game-day formula for success, here it is. At a Perth cafe on the morning of the game, To'o's Blue buddies Jarome Luai, Stephen Crichton and Leniu were waiting for him – with five cans of Coke Zero. 'And that's his caramel latte, too,' said Luai. This was at about 9.30am on game day. The unusual pre-match fuelling routine certainly works a treat. To'o is an absolute machine and was the Blues' best player, scoring three tries and running for more than 200m despite pre-match injury concerns. Afterwards, he could barely walk. He had ice on his hamstring and foot. 'It's just gout,' he joked. 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It's the game that actually generates money for those who pay for the free-to-air rights, and also something the AFL is extremely envious of. The passion and the quality of football at Origin level is mind-boggling. We are lucky to have it and should appreciate the concept. New Blue's jersey drama Jacob Preston 's late call-up to the Blues side as 20th man was a huge honour for the young Bulldog, but it meant a scramble to get a jumper for game day – and more immediately for the jumper presentation evening. The Blues had to ring the local Rebel Sports to see if they could purchase a replica jersey to hand him symbolically on the presentation evening. Fortunately, a store at Joondalup had one in stock to make do until Preston received his official jersey pre-game. Longley goes from Bulls to Blues The Blues did everything possible to prepare their team for Origin II, including bringing Boomers legend Luc Longley into camp. 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