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State of Origin series

The State of Origin series is an annual best-of-three rugby league series between two Australian state representative sides, the New South Wales Blues and the Queensland Maroons.[1]

For the Australian rules football version, see State of Origin (Australian rules football).

Sport

2

Queensland (2023 men)
Queensland (2024 women)

New South Wales mens (25 titles)
Queensland mens (15 titles)
New South Wales womens (5 titles)
Queensland womens (19 titles)

Referred to as “Australian sport's greatest rivalry”,[2][3][4][5] the State of Origin series is one of Australia's premier sporting events, attracting huge television audiences and usually selling out the stadiums in which the games are played.[6] It is regularly described as the pinnacle of rugby league, inclusive of comparisons with international competitions.[7][8][9][10]


Players are selected to represent the Australian state in which they played their first senior rugby league game (either high school or local senior club). Before 1980 players were only selected for interstate matches based on where they were playing their club football at the time. Queensland was not generally competitive under these selection rules, with a total record of 54 wins, 8 draws, and 159 losses, as their smaller economy and ban on poker machines meant that leagues clubs could not compete and the vast majority of elite players ended up playing in the much richer Sydney Rugby League premiership.


In both 1980 and 1981, there were two interstate matches under the old selection rules and one experimental "State of Origin" match. From 1982 onwards a best-of-three match series has been played around the middle of the rugby league season for the State of Origin shield. During the early years the overall series results remained relatively even, but Queensland surged ahead between 2006 and 2017, winning 11 out of 12 series, including a record eight series in a row.

Teams[edit]

Since the 1908 establishment of rugby league in Australia, the sport's two major states, New South Wales and Queensland, have played representative matches against each other which have continued into the "state of origin" era which began in 1980. The two states' teams are frequently referred to as the Blues and Maroons, reflecting the respective colours of their jerseys. These were the colours of the Australia national rugby league team's jersey until the adoption of the green and gold. The Blues team is administered by the New South Wales Rugby League and the Maroons by the Queensland Rugby League. The New South Wales team are sometimes referred to by the nickname "Cockroaches" and the Queensland team as "Cane Toads", due to names given to them by Barry Muir and Johnny Raper respectively. It was reinforced by a marketing campaign used in the 1980s where the respective teams were caricatured as such.


While other Australian states and territories also have representative rugby league teams,[11][12] they have not competed in the State of Origin.

If the third game was to decide the series it was not to act as a selection trial, and also,

that the expatriate Queenslanders would be under the supervision of a representative of the NSWRFL whose duty it would be to protect the interests of both the NSWRFL and the clubs to which they were contracted. (From 1980 this role was filled by Bob Abbott, a official.)

Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks

Includes overnight and total viewership (in brackets)

Within Australia, Nine Network is the main broadcaster for the series, with replays airing on Fox Sports. The series is also broadcast on radio by ABC Radio Grandstand.


Setanta Sports broadcasts live matches in Asia. In the United States, Fox Soccer televised all matches live using the Nine feed since 2011, with the coverage moving to Fox Sports 2 when Fox Soccer was discontinued in August 2013.[38][39] Sky Sports broadcasts live coverage of State of Origin in the UK.


Roy and HG's State of Origin commentary was once broadcast on Australian youth radio network Triple J. This broadcast was presented by the characters "Rampaging" Roy Slaven and HG Nelson (played by John Doyle and Greig Pickhaver), who commentated the game with a unique comedic style. Roy and HG's broadcasts began in the late 1980s and continued until 2008. Roy and HG moved from Triple J to radio network Triple M in 2009, at which point the duo ceased their State of Origin commentary.

italics denotes player won it from the losing state.

The Wally Lewis Medal was awarded by the Queensland Rugby League for the Queensland player of the series from 1992 to 2003, when The Ron McAuliffe Medal replaced it as the Queensland exclusive award. From 2004 onwards it has been awarded to the player of the series irrespective of state, to the following players:

Most games won: 70, Queensland

Most series won: 24, Queensland

Most titles: 26, Queensland

Most consecutive games won: 8, Queensland (Game II, – Game III, 1989)

1987

Most consecutive series won: 8, Queensland (–2013)

2006

Most series clean sweeps: 4, Queensland (–1989, 1995, 2010)

1988

Largest winning margin: 46, Queensland 52–6 New South Wales (Game III, )

2015

Most points scored in a game: 72, New South Wales 56–16 Queensland (Game III, )

2000

Most points scored by a team: 56, New South Wales 56–16 Queensland (Game III, )

2000

Points

In popular culture[edit]

In an episode of the third season of the ABC Kids animated series Bluey titled "The Decider", Bluey, her family, and her neighbours Pat, Janelle, Lucky, and Chucky watch a third State of Origin match where Queensland win the series.[70]

National Rugby League

City vs Country Origin

Super League Tri-series

International Origin

Rugby League War of the Roses

State of Origin

Rugby league in Australia

Affiliated States Championship

Australian regional rivals – NSW vs. QLD

Wheelchair State Challenge

Maxwell Leo Howell; Peter Hastie; Reet Howell (1992). . Herron. ISBN 9780947163969.

State of Origin, the first twelve years

Norman Tasker; Australian Rugby Football League; John Macdonald; Mike Colman; Andrew Webster (2005). . Playright Publishing. ISBN 9780949853936.

State of Origin: 25 years of sport's greatest rivalry

Helen Elward, (2003). State of origin: gods of the grounds. Best Legenz. ISBN 9780958043311.

Graeme Langlands

Harris, Bret (1992). . Pan Macmillan. ISBN 9780725106973.

Winfield State of Origin 1980–1991

State of Origin news section

Hugh Lunn talks about the origin of State of Origin