Queensland Maroons' Attacking Flair Falls Short in Origin Decider Loss
نظرة سريعة
- The Queensland Maroons, known for their attacking flair, lost the Origin decider 30-12 to the NSW Blues.
- Despite early promise, ill-discipline and key moments saw them trail significantly by halftime, and a late try sealed their fate.
ملخص مُنشأ بالذكاء الاصطناعي
لماذا يهم
The Queensland Maroons, coached by Billy Slater, have balanced grit with attacking flair, achieving series wins in 2022, 2023, and 2025. However, their approach faltered in the decisive Game III loss.
The Queensland Maroons under Billy Slater have been a paradox for footy brains that enjoy narrative.
They've got all the grit and mongrel, and players punching above their weight, but their cup also overflows with outlandish attacking flair.
Stars like Reece Walsh, Sam Walker, Hamiso Tabuai-Fidow, Kalyn Ponga and even Jeremiah Nanai are not the players you associate with hard graft and the Origin folklore of jerseys so stained by mud that maroon and blue become indistinguishable.
Of course it's nonsense. No-one plays rugby league to a professional level, much less representative, without bravery and intestinal fortitude.
They managed that perceived imbalance expertly through series wins in 2022, 23 and 25, but the scales see-sawed wildly in the 30-12 loss in the decider last night.
The first 10 minutes painted a picture of a Maroons team ready to complete a comprehensive series victory. One where they were on top for all but 25 minutes of Game I, when they were cruelly reduced to 12 men by Ponga's send-off.
One where the Blues chopped and changed courses and horses from game to game and minute to minute.
One where the fancy-free but somehow rock-solid Queenslanders exorcised the demons of the 2024 decider, when Michael Maguire's Blues pulled off a remarkably similar feat with a stunning Lang Park win.
Instead, after that initial 10-minute burst, it took just one or two moments of ill-discipline to flip the fates of both teams.
As Mitchell Moses's booming boot repeatedly sent Selwyn Cobbo flying back to his own 10-metre line, forcing the hero of Game II to charge back into three or four defenders built like brick walls, it pinned the Maroons back in their half.
The Blues' "on paper" team finally showed up on the pitch, and Nathan Cleary's back-to-date tries, followed by Cameron Murray's sneak attack, left Queensland playing catch-up.
If any team could do it, this would be it. And there were signs.
Tabuai-Fidow scythed over for his 14th try in 13 games — passing Greg Inglis's Origin record of 18 seems a formality rather than a mission at this point — and even though they were down 18-4 at half-time, the threat was never gone.
When Walker left the field for an HIA just after the break, Slater made clear he left his wait-and-see approach from Game II in Melbourne and sent Walsh out there.
And it worked. Maybe. Kind of.
As captain Cameron Munster said: "It looked really nice at times, but we didn't get the chocolates."
When Walker passed his HIA, Walsh stayed on, and Ponga came off. As things got more desperate, Slater pushed the chips in and took off Tom Flegler to send Ponga back on.
No time for battlers; this was a moment for game-breakers.
But, if the last game at the MCG and last year's victory in the decider in Sydney showed Queenslanders the dream version of Slater wielding all his weapons, 2026 was a nightmare.
Inspirational Kurt Capewell, a favourite of the coach's, had his worst Origin outing, and Cobbo, a player of the series candidate before kick-off, fared about as well.
The Harry Grant-Ponga-Munster-Walker-Walsh spine had its moments, but in the same way that a ziplock bag of oobleck thrown on a trampoline might occasionally pull off some pleasing manoeuvres. At the end of the day, you couldn't really predict what was going to happen.
Perhaps the most telling nadir came in the 57th minute when the Maroons were trailing by 10 and desperately pressing the NSW line.
A hasty dummy-half pass appeared destined for Munster, who had replaced Walker at first receiver during his 15-minute absence, but Walsh seemingly intercepted it.
Such is his skill, he manufactured a pretty well-weighted kick across for Jojo Fifita, but the worm turned immediately as Bradman Best swooped and went the length for the decisive try.
Slater and the Maroons have proven their method can work, but when you consider the double-edged footy philosophy being employed, maybe three series wins and three losses should be expected.
أسئلة مفتوحة
- Will Slater's philosophy be re-evaluated?
- Can the Maroons regain their series-winning form?

