The Rugby League State of Origin is an annual series of three interstate rugby league matches between the Queensland Maroons and the New South Wales Blues.
The State of Origin series is one of Australia's premier sporting events after the Ashes. Origin games are traditionally hyped to be the toughest, hardest-fought matches played in Australia, with both teams maintaining a fierce effort right to the end of the game.
Players are selected for the state in which they played their first senior football. Prior to 1980 players were selected for interstate matches on the basis of where they were playing their club football. In both 1980 and 1981 there were two interstate matches under the old selection rules and one State of Origin match.
The first calls for a state of origin selection policy in interstate rugby came before rugby league was actually played in Australia. In 1900 by a journalist known as The Cynic wrote in The Referee that star rugby union player and recent immigrant to Queensland, Stephen Spragg, should be able to play for his home state of New South Wales.
Queensland won the 2006 State of Origin series, defeating New South Wales 2-1 in the best of three series.
The first interstate game was played at Sydney's Agricultural Ground on July 11 1908, before Queensland had even commenced a club competition. New South Wales easily accounted for Queensland in a 43-0 victory. The local media were unimpressed.
Apart from a golden period for Queensland in the 1920s, the interstate series was dominated by New South Wales. From 1922 to 1925 Queensland defeated New South Wales 11 times in 12 matches. At the end of the 1925 season a Kangaroo touring team was to be picked. Instead of announcing an Australian team dominated by Queenslanders, the Australian Rugby League Board of Control informed the media that the Rugby Football League had decided that the Kiwis would provide stronger opposition, and that there would be no Australian tour. The period spanning 1922 to 1929 saw no Australian team play in Great Britain, the only such hiatus outside the two world wars.
The New South Wales dominance of interstate football increased after 1956 when gaming machines were legalised for all registered clubs in New South Wales. This provided New South Wales football clubs with a revenue source unmatched by Queensland clubs. From this time on an increasing number of Queensland players moved to the Sydney competition, becoming ineligible for Queensland state selection. Paul Hogan (actor) famously told a Queensland Rugby League gathering in 1977 that "every time Queensland produces a good footballer, he finishes up being processed through a New South Wales poker machine."
Prior to 1956, Qld had won 25% of series played. From 1956-1981 this number dwindled to only 3.8% with only 1 series win, in 1959.
In 1977, an Australian rules football state of origin game was held between Western Australia and Victoria. Queensland Rugby League (QRL) chairman Ron McAullife attended at the invitation of Victorian Football League (VFL) president Dr Alan Aylett. Also in attendance was The Courier-Mail reporter Hugh Lunn, Brisbane Broncos founder Barry Maranta and Maranata's business partner Wayne Reid. All played a part in attempting to persuade McAuliffe that the concept could be used in rugby league. Lunn told McAullife that "you can take the Queenslander out of Queensland, Ron, but you can't take Queensland out of the Queenslander."
McAuliffe was initially sceptical. "What if we recall our boys from Sydney to play, and we are beaten. Where would we go from there?" Reid spoke to New South Wales Rugby League president Kevin Humphreys and suggested that a one-off state of origin match could be used as a test selection trial.
New South Wales clubs were reticent to support the concept and set two conditions:
Three Sydney clubs remained opposed to the plan: St. George Dragons, South Sydney Rabbitohs and Eastern Suburbs Roosters. As these clubs were refusing to release players Kevin Humphreys threatened to make the game an official Australian Rugby League trial, which would make release mandatory. The clubs backed down.
After Queensland lost the first two interstate matches (35-3 and 17-7, the second game in front of only 1,638 Sydneysiders) it was announced that a state of origin match would take place on July 8 at Lang Park in Brisbane. The New South Wales media gave both the event, and Queensland's chance of winning it, little credence, calling the game a "three day wonder". Australia's 1978 captain Bob Fulton called the match "the non-event of the century". Ron MacAullife was, however, now committed to the concept, and vigorously promoted the match. Thousands of tickes were sold before the game had been officially sanctioned.
Although interstate matches in Brisbane were still well attended (24,653 had attended the opening match of the 1979 series), few expected the sell-out crowd of 33,210 at Lang Park that saw Queensland convincingly beat New South Wales 20-10.
From 1982 to 1984 the New South Wales media dismissed the seriousness of the Queensland threat. Queensland was inspired by this, and in each of these years won the series 2-1. In 1985, under the leadship of captain Steve Mortimer, New South Wales won the deciding match in front of 40,000 spectators at the Sydney Cricket Ground. In 1986 the Blues were able to go one better and complete the first state of origin whitewash, taking the series 3-0.
In Origin: Rugby League's Greatest Contest 1980-2002 (2003) Jack Gallaway tells the story:
In 1987 the Australian Rugby League (ARL), New South Wales Rugby League and Queensland Rugby League agreed that the match would count towards the players' individual statistics, but that the match would not count towards the states' overall records. On July 15, 2003 the Australian Rugby League announced that the fourth 1987 game was to be classified as an official match, and that a win in the state of origin match on July 16, 2003 would take New South Wales into the overall lead.
ARL chief executive Geoff Carr said: "There had been some debate over whether the Origin fixture . . . in 1987 was counted as an official match but a search of ARL records has confirmed the status conferred on that clash by the game's governing body at the time. In announcing the match in Big League in April 1987, Ken Arthurson was quoted as saying 'It's an exciting experiment but the match isn't and won't be billed as an exhibition match'."
Ken Arthurson, ARL chief executive in 1987, disputed this, saying: "There is absolutely no doubt in my mind it was an exhibition game and should not count towards official match scores."
| State | Wins | Losses | Draws | Series wins | One-off wins |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| New South Wales | 38 | 38 | 2 | 12 | 0 |
| Queensland | 38 | 38 | 2 | 13 | 2 |
| 1980 | Queensland | 1 | New South Wales | - | Drawn | - |
| 1981 | Queensland | 1 | New South Wales | - | Drawn | - |
| 1982 | Queensland | 2 | New South Wales | 1 | Drawn | - |
| 1983 | Queensland | 2 | New South Wales | 1 | Drawn | - |
| 1984 | Queensland | 2 | New South Wales | 1 | Drawn | - |
| 1985 | New South Wales | 2 | Queensland | 1 | Drawn | - |
| 1986 | New South Wales | 3 | Queensland | - | Drawn | - |
| 1987 | Queensland | 2 | New South Wales | 2 | Drawn | - |
| 1988 | Queensland | 3 | New South Wales | - | Drawn | - |
| 1989 | Queensland | 3 | New South Wales | - | Drawn | - |
| 1990 | New South Wales | 2 | Queensland | 1 | Drawn | - |
| 1991 | Queensland | 2 | New South Wales | 1 | Drawn | - |
| 1992 | New South Wales | 2 | Queensland | 1 | Drawn | - |
| 1993 | New South Wales | 2 | Queensland | 1 | Drawn | - |
| 1994 | New South Wales | 2 | Queensland | 1 | Drawn | - |
| 1995 | Queensland | 3 | New South Wales | - | Drawn | - |
| 1996 | New South Wales | 3 | Queensland | - | Drawn | - |
| 1997 | New South Wales | 2 | Queensland | 1 | Drawn | - |
| 1998 | Queensland | 2 | New South Wales | 1 | Drawn | - |
| 1999 | Queensland | 1 | New South Wales | 1 | Drawn | 1 |
| 2000 | New South Wales | 3 | Queensland | - | Drawn | - |
| 2001 | Queensland | 2 | New South Wales | 1 | Drawn | - |
| 2002 | Queensland | 1 | New South Wales | 1 | Drawn | 1 |
| 2003 | New South Wales | 2 | Queensland | 1 | Drawn | - |
| 2004 | New South Wales | 2 | Queensland | 1 | Drawn | - |
| 2005 | New South Wales | 2 | Queensland | 1 | Drawn | - |
| 2006 | Queensland | 2 | New South Wales | 1 | Drawn | - |
Australian rugby league competitions | Sport in New South Wales | Sport in Queensland | Australian sporting events
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Rugby League State of Origin".
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