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NSW Blues axe four players as team set to be named for Origin II

The Blues pose for a team photo during a New South Wales Blues State of Origin squad Media Opportunity at Crowne Plaza Coogee on May 30, 2022 in Sydney, Australia. (Photo by Mark Metcalfe/Getty Images)

Matt Burton and Siosifa Talakai are poised to make their State of Origin debuts with NSW coach Brad Fittler making at least five changes to his team for Game II in Perth.

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Fittler on Sunday night named a 22-man squad resembling nothing like the one that was beaten in Sydney, with seven new faces across the group.

Ryan Matterson, Reagan Campbell-Gillard, Kotoni Staggs and Tariq Sims have all been axed after playing in the series-opening loss, while Jack Wighton is out with COVID-19.

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In their place, Apisai Koroisau is set to make his Blues return on the bench in the must-win clash, while Angus Crichton and Jake Trbojevic have also been recalled after they were controversial omissions for Game I.

But there is no room for Josh Addo-Carr, who has been left out despite scoring five tries in the two games for Canterbury immediately after his shock snubbing.

Fittler will not confirm his 17-man team until Monday morning, but Victor Radley, Jordan McLean, Joseph Suaalii, Clint Gutherson and Nicho Hynes were also part of his wider squad on Sunday night and are expected to act as reserves.

The Blues will also be sweating on Monday morning’s charge sheet that is set to drop before they take off for Perth, with Burton potentially in trouble for dangerous contact on Alex Twal.

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Burton was not penalised or put on report for the incident, where he inadvertently pushed Twal’s head into ground after fighting off kick pressure in Canterbury’s win over Wests Tigers.

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The incident is similar to the grade-one charge that was levelled against Felise Kaufusi last week for his contact on Sam Walker, with the Melbourne second-rower winning that case at the judiciary.

Only a grade-two charge would rule Burton out of his Origin debut, given he would be able to accept a fine for a grade-one offence.

Burton has spent this year playing at five-eighth for Canterbury, but was Dally M centre of the year for Penrith last season.

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Starting at left centre, he will reunite with his previous club combination of Jarome Luai and Brian To’o, while he can also move to the halves if needed.

Stephen Crichton would then be expected play right centre, making for seven Panthers’ in the Blues team.

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Talakai will come off the interchange as a versatile option out wide or in the forwards, with Angus Crichton, Trbojevic and Koroisau all joining him on the bench.

“To get this opportunity means the world,” Talakai told reporters as he arrived at the team’s hotel in Sydney.

“I didn’t make it in Harold Matthews (under-16s) or SG Ball (under-18s), so to make it on the big stage is massive.”

Koroisau’s selection comes a year after he was threatened with a Blues ban for breaking COVID-19 protocols in 2021.

But his inclusion is crucial to Fitter’s game plan after NSW were beaten around the ruck in Game I in Sydney and desperately lacked the kind of spark Queensland produced off the bench when Harry Grant was brought on.

NSW SQUAD FOR GAME II (WITH EXPECTED TEAM)

James Tedesco (capt), Daniel Tupou, Matt Burton, Stephen Crichton, Brian To’o, Jarome Luai, Nathan Cleary, Junior Paulo, Damien Cook, Payne Haas, Cameron Murray, Liam Martin, Isaah Yeo. Interchange: Apisai Koroisau, Jake Trbojevic, Siosifa Talakai, Angus Crichton.

Reserves: Nicho Hynes, Joseph Suaalii, Victor Radley, Jordan McLean, Clint Gutherson.

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J
JW 1 hour ago
New law innovations will have unexpected impacts on Super Rugby Pacific

It will be interesting to see how the rucks adjust as the season goes on, to be fair it will be hard to tell as you might have only got half a dozen caterpillars in a normal Super game anyway? I was actually looking forward (statistically speaking) to seeing teams trying to adopt the tactic more (and I don’t mind the lotteryness madhater results of a kick too much) after the success it proved when used in Internationals. Now were unlikely to really see it. I had another thought while watching some of the footy along these lines too, how ref interpretations normally change through the season (they got more lenient of a few of last years changes as the season went on), after Nickers said that they shouldn’t be holding preseason games on hard grounds in Feb, that what if we purposefully introduced law interpretations progressively through the season, if outright law changes, so that the start is very fast and open, mimicking pre season, building towards more of a contest and collisions (where errors start to get expected), and then when its wet possibly it can favor scrums and defense again? Or you go the other way, towards the end of the season why a structure Crusaders has reigned king you introduce laws to keeping attacking in favor?

Bonus is they’d become adept at adapting, and come July or Internationals, will be better because dealing with them has become a real skill?



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