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2012 State of Origin series

The 2012 State of Origin series was the 31st time the annual best-of-three series between the Queensland and New South Wales rugby league teams was played entirely under 'state of origin' rules. For the fourth successive year a Queensland victory set a new record for consecutive State of Origin titles, reaching seven. Game I was played at Melbourne's sold out Etihad Stadium and won by Queensland; its television broadcast watched by more than 2.5 million viewers, rating it as the most-watched State of Origin broadcast since the introduction of OzTAM ratings in 1999.[1] New South Wales' series-equalling win in Game II, played at Sydney's sold out ANZ Stadium, set a new TV ratings record for most-watched second game of any series in State of Origin history.[2] The decider, Game III was played at Brisbane's Suncorp Stadium and was won by Queensland.[3] This game set a new record for the highest television audience in Australia for a rugby league match since the introduction of the OzTam ratings system in 2001.[4]

2012 State of Origin series
Won by Queensland (17th title)
Series margin2-1
Points scored97
Attendance191,569 (ave. 63,856 per match)
Player of the series Nate Myles
Top points scorer(s) Johnathan Thurston22
Top try scorer(s) Darius Boyd
Brett Stewart
Both 3

In 2012, the first year of the independent Australian Rugby League Commission, a new rule was put into place that would set out earlier in a player's career which was his state of origin.[5] For the second successive year, Queensland hosted Game III and New South Wales hosted Game II; typically the states would alternate the hosting of these games.

Ricky Stuart stepped down as New South Wales head coach after the series in August, shortly after signing a contract to coach the Parramatta Eels from 2013 onwards. Later in the year New South Wales' player of the series was named: hooker Robbie Farah.

2012 also saw the inaugural Under 20s State of Origin match which was played at Centerbet Stadium, with New South Wales taking out the Darren Lockyer Shield against Queensland.

Game I edit

The opening game for the New South Wales Blues saw Todd Carney, James Tamou, Tony Williams and Jamie Buhrer make their debuts, with all either having previous international representative or grand final experience. Michael Jennings was the first Origin player in 29 years to be selected to the squad after playing in the reserve grades, where he was dropped from the Penrith Panthers for one game due to poor off-field discipline. Jamie Buhrer from the Manly Sea Eagles was generally the shock selection in the squad, only playing for City Origin earlier in the year as his sole representative honour and was yet to play 50 games for his club, but was selected due to his big game experience, having played in Manly's winning 2011 NRL Grand Final team, and his high utility value to replace their recognised utility in Kurt Gidley who was unable to play in the 2012 series to due a season-long injury. Only 9 of the selected 17 players were incumbent from Game Three in 2011.

Queensland's selected side for the first game was largely unchanged from the 2011 series, with only four changes made. Their only debutant was Matt Gillett from the Brisbane Broncos to play a utility role from the bench. It was hooker Cameron Smith's first match and series as the permanent captain for his state, having previously filled in for the role only in Darren Lockyer's absence.

Wednesday, 23 May 2012
20:00
New South Wales   10 – 18   Queensland
Tries
Uate (6') 1
Jennings (43') 1
Goals
Carney 1/3
(44')
report


Tries
2 (27', 40') Boyd
1 (73') Inglis
Goals
3/3 Thurston
(28' ,40' ,74')
Etihad Stadium, Melbourne
Attendance: 56,021
Referee: Ben Cummins, Matt Cecchin
Player of the Match: Nate Myles (Queensland)

1st half

New South Wales held most of the momentum early in the match, and scored first through winger Akuila Uate in the sixth minute of the match, who recovered a bomb kick and scored in the corner; Todd Carney missed the conversion and New South Wales led 4–0. In the twenty-first minute, a brawl erupted; Blues centre Michael Jennings, who ran some distance to leap into the brawl and punch Brent Tate in the head, was sent to the sin bin for ten minutes. The Maroons scored shortly afterwards, with winger Darius Boyd touching down in the corner and Johnathan Thurston converting to give Queensland a 6–4 lead. Boyd scored again in the thirty-eighth minute, and another successful conversion from Thurston gave Queensland a 12–4 lead at halftime.[6]

2nd half

New South Wales added points early in the second half, with Jennings scoring a try from a bomb kick; Carney's successful conversion brought the score to 12–10. New South Wales had most of the attack during the second half, but Queensland was able to defend its goal-line and prevent the Blues from scoring; and in the fifty-second minute, Carney narrowly missed a long-range penalty goal attempt which would have levelled the scores at twelve apiece, but after seventy minutes, Queensland still led 12–10.[6] After a repeat set of six in the seventy-third minute, Maroons' centre Greg Inglis crossed the line in controversial circumstances: after recovering the ball from a cross-field kick, Inglis lost control of the ball when it contacted the boot of Blues' hooker Robbie Farah, before regathering and grounding in goal. After a lengthy review, the video referee awarded a try: he ruled that Farah had intentionally played at and kicked the ball out of Inglis' hands, and that Inglis' loss of control was therefore not a knock-on. The try was converted, and there was no further score, giving Queensland 18–10 victory.[7] The decision to award the try to Inglis was highly controversial. Blues captain Paul Gallen argued vehemently with the referee onfield following the decision, although was more circumspect after the match.[8] Inglis' controversial try saw him pass Dale Shearer to become the all-time leading try scorer in State of Origin football.[9] Michael Jennings received a one-match suspension for the punch for which he was sin-binned during the match.[10] It was Queensland's fourth Game One victory in a row, the first time either team had achieved the feat.[citation needed]

After the controversial Inglis try call, and others during the game, New South Wales coach Ricky Stuart asked his players not to give interviews to media in the lead-up to Game II, although the ban was lifted after two days.[11] The decision was officially endorsed by referees' coach Bill Harrigan the following day.[7]

Game II edit

The two players to enter the New South Wales squad for the second game of the series were Anthony Watmough and Tim Grant, with Grant making his debut. Grant was included to partner James Tamou as starting props, with captain Paul Gallen moved back to his preferred position at lock and Greg Bird subsequently shifted to second row with Luke Lewis to the bench to replace Jamie Buhrer. Watmough replaces Tony Williams who was not selected due to a sustained injury. The announced Queensland side remained unchanged, however afterwards Sam Thaiday was forced to withdraw due to injury and was replaced by David Taylor, allowing Corey Parker to enter the squad.

Wednesday, 13 June 2012
20:00
New South Wales   16 – 12   Queensland
Tries
B Stewart (26', 45') 2
J.Morris (48') 1
Goals
Carney 2/4
(43', 46')
Report


Tries
1 (40') Hannant
1 (62') Inglis
Goals
2/2 Thurston
(40', 63')
ANZ Stadium, Sydney
Attendance: 83,110
Referee: Tony Archer, Ben Cummins
Player of the Match: Greg Bird

1st half

Game 2 saw a very physical contest between the two sides. New South Wales dominated possession, and Brett Stewart scored the first try of the game in the corner after around 25 minutes, giving New South Wales a 4–0 lead. A late converted try by Ben Hannant after a bomb kick was misread by the New South Wales backline saw Queensland lead 6–4 at half-time.

2nd half

Two minutes into the second half, Cooper Cronk was sin-binned for a professional foul which denied Todd Carney the opportunity to score under the posts from a grubber kick; Carney converted a penalty goal to level the scores at 6–6. Billy Slater and Corey Parker then suffered game-changing injuries as the Maroons struggled to keep up with the Blues' pace. New South Wales scored two quick tries during Cronk's period in the sin bin, with both Brett Stewart scoring a 50-metre try following a break by Carney, and Josh Morris scoring after a break by Jarryd Hayne. Johnathan Thurston had stripped Hayne of the ball which travelled forward, Morris picked the ball up and out paced Greg Inglis in a 40-metre sprint to score; this gave New South Wales a 16–6 lead. From there, Queensland began to have the better of possession, and won several repeat sets from goal-line dropouts. Greg Inglis scored a try in the 62nd minute, the conversion bringing the score back to 16–12. Brent Tate almost scored a try in the 70th minute, but Michael Jennings knocked the ball out of his grasp in the in-goal area to save the try. There were no further points in the game, and New South Wales won the game 16–12, to level the series.

Game III edit

Injury concerns to both squads forced their respective coaches to name extended squads for the decider. Glenn Stewart was the main injury concern for New South Wales, as was Billy Slater likewise for Queensland. Both players were not available for the game. For NSW, Beau Scott replaced the injured Stewart whilst Brett Morris was chosen over Akuila Uate and Tony Williams returned replacing Trent Merrin.

Greg Inglis was selected to replace Slater, although Matthew Bowen and Darius Boyd were also considered as replacements. Inglis's centre spot was filled by Dane Nielson whilst Corey Parker took Ashley Harrison's lock position, as Harrison was ruled out from injury. Sam Thaiday returned to the run-on squad and Ben Te'o was considered over David Taylor on the bench.

Wednesday, 4 July 2012
20:00
Queensland   21 – 20   New South Wales
Tries
Boyd (19') 1
Thurston (32') 1
Hodges (35') 1
Goals
Thurston 4/5
(33', 36', 52' pen, 64' pen)
Field goals
Cronk (75') 1
Report


Tries
1 (13') B Morris
1 (47') Stewart
1 (70') J Morris
Goals
4/4 Carney
(7' pen, 14' ,49' ,71')
Suncorp Stadium, Brisbane
Attendance: 52,437
Referee: Tony Archer, Ben Cummins
Player of the Match: Johnathan Thurston (Queensland)
1st half

New South Wales scored first with a penalty goal by Todd Carney, and then ran in the first try of the match in the 13th minute, scored by Brett Morris and converted by Carney, for an early lead of 8 points to nil. Queensland's Darius Boyd scored out wide after 19 minutes from a cut-out pass from Johnathan Thurston. Thirteen minutes later, from deep in Queensland's half, Thurston broke through an attempted Mitchell Pearce tackle and raced 35m up field before finding Brent Tate and Cooper Cronk in support; two tackles later Thurston accepted an offload from Corey Parker to score close to the posts. New South Wales then kicked the restart into touch on the full and three tackles later Justin Hodges scored a controversial try beside the posts, after calls from New South Wales players for obstruction were denied by the video referee. Thurston converted his own and Hodges' tries, and the score at the half-time break was 16–8 in favour of the Maroons.

2nd half

Seven minutes into the second half, Brett Stewart pounced on a Robbie Farah grubber kick into the Queensland in-goal and scored his third try of the series for the Blues just before the ball went dead; Carney converted the try to reduce the margin to 16–14. The next two scores were both Queensland penalty goals kicked by Thurston, one in the 49th minute and one in the 64th minute, to make the score 20–14. In the 70th minute, Josh Morris scored a try in the corner following a perfectly placed cross-field kick by Robbie Farah, Morris showing great skill to out-jump Darius Boyd and score before sliding into touch; Todd Carney then converted the kick from the sideline to even up the match at 20 points each. Maroons halfback Cooper Cronk kicked a field goal from 40m out to put Queensland ahead by one point with six minutes remaining. Mitchell Pearce then missed a long-range field goal in the final minute to give the Maroons a one-point victory, and their seventh successive State of Origin series victory. Nate Myles was awarded the Wally Lewis Medal for best player in the series while Johnathan Thurston, playing his 24th consecutive Origin match since debut, won his fifth Man of the Match award.

Johnathan Thurston's try in the 32nd minute of Game III saw him pass former New South Wales player Michael O'Connor (1985–91) as the second highest point scorer in Origin history.

This game set a new record for the highest television audience in Australia for a rugby league match since the introduction of the OzTam ratings system in 2001, and the 2nd highest OzTam-rated television audience in Australian television history (Games 1 and 2 were the 5th and 6th most watched respectively). This includes a record 421,000 viewership in Melbourne for Game 3, more than all the previous month's Friday Night AFL matches, and up 100,000 from the previous record set for Game 2.[12]

Teams edit

The 18th & 19th man are reserves to cover for any forthcoming injuries and, unless chosen, do not actually play.

New South Wales Blues edit

Position Game 1 Game 2 Game 3
Fullback   Brett Stewart
Wing   Jarryd Hayne
Centre   Michael Jennings
Centre   Josh Morris
Wing   Akuila Uate   Brett Morris
Five-Eighth   Todd Carney
Halfback   Mitchell Pearce
Prop   Paul Gallen (c)   Tim Grant
Hooker   Robbie Farah
Prop   James Tamou
2nd Row   Luke Lewis   Greg Bird
2nd Row   Glenn Stewart   Beau Scott 2
Lock   Greg Bird   Paul Gallen (c)
Interchange   Trent Merrin   Tony Williams
Interchange   Jamie Buhrer   Luke Lewis
Interchange   Ben Creagh
Interchange   Tony Williams   Anthony Watmough
Coach Ricky Stuart
18th Man   Aaron Woods 1   Jamie Buhrer   Trent Merrin
19th Man   Joseph Leilua   Akuila Uate

1 - Tariq Sims was originally selected but withdrew due to injury. He was replaced by Aaron Woods.
2 - Glenn Stewart was originally selected to play but withdrew due to injury. He was replaced by Beau Scott.

Queensland Maroons edit

Queensland's team for the 2012 campaign featured one débutante in Brisbane utility Matt Gillett. No changes were made to the successful Game I team until Sam Thaiday was forced out when a shoulder injury failed to respond to treatment before Game II. This brought David Taylor into the starting side and Corey Parker onto the bench.

Position Game 1 Game 2 Game 3
Fullback   Billy Slater   Greg Inglis 2
Wing   Darius Boyd
Centre   Greg Inglis   Dane Nielsen 2
Centre   Justin Hodges
Wing   Brent Tate
Five-eighth   Johnathan Thurston
Halfback   Cooper Cronk
Prop forward   Matthew Scott
Hooker   Cameron Smith (c)
Prop   Petero Civoniceva
2nd-row   Nate Myles
2nd-row   Sam Thaiday   David Taylor 1   Sam Thaiday
Lock   Ashley Harrison   Corey Parker
Interchange   Matt Gillett
Interchange   David Taylor   Corey Parker 1   Ben Te'o
Interchange   Ben Hannant
Interchange   David Shillington
Coach Mal Meninga
18th man   Daly Cherry-Evans   Dallas Johnson   Matt Bowen
19th man   Dane Nielson   Ben Barba   Dave Taylor

1 - Sam Thaiday was originally selected to play but withdrew due to a shoulder injury. He was replaced by interchange forward David Taylor whilst Corey Parker was called onto the bench.
2 - Billy Slater was originally selected to play but withdrew due to a knee injury sustained during Game II. He was replaced by Greg Inglis whilst Dane Nielson came into the centres for Inglis.

Under-20s edit

The 2012 Under 20s State of Origin was the introduction of the State Of Origin concept to the Holden Cup. New South Wales win the inaugural Darren Lockyer Shield.

April 21, 2012
19:30
New South Wales   18 – 14   Queensland
Tries
Evans 1
Mata'utia1
Siejka1
Goals
Siejka 3/3
Report
Tries
Whitchurch 1
Lee 2
Goals
Frei 1/3
Centerbet Stadium, Sydney
Attendance: 5,105
Referee: Dave Munro
Player of the Match: Harry Siejka

Women's State of Origin edit

2 May 2015
18:00 (Local)

References edit

  1. ^ Knox, David (24 May 2012). "2.5m watch as State of Origin breaks records". TV Tonight. Retrieved 24 May 2012.
  2. ^ "State of Origin helps Nine to big win". mUmBRELLA. 14 June 2012. Retrieved 16 June 2012.
  3. ^ "2012 rugby league fixtures". The Sydney Morning Herald. Fairfax Media. Retrieved 31 March 2012.
  4. ^ Ellis, Scott (5 July 2012). "Origin clash smashes ratings records". The Age. Fairfax Digital. Retrieved 9 July 2012.
  5. ^ Rothfield, Phil (31 March 2012). "NRL moves to block Queensland's Origin selection rorts". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 31 March 2012.
  6. ^ a b Pritchard, Greg (24 May 2012). "Origin I: The eight key moments". Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 24 May 2012.
  7. ^ a b Harrigan, Bill (24 May 2012). "Official view: Inglis try was fair, says Harrigan". National Rugby League. Retrieved 24 May 2012.
  8. ^ Barrett, Chris (24 May 2012). "Are you for real? Gallen blue in the face after referees' calls". Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 24 May 2012.
  9. ^ Read, Brent (24 May 2012). "Enraged NSW cries Blue burder after State of Origin opener". The Australian. Retrieved 24 May 2012.
  10. ^ "Jennings cops one-week ban". Sydney Morning Herald. 24 May 2012. Retrieved 24 May 2012.
  11. ^ Walter, Brad. "Analyst blows whistle on Maroons' dirty play". Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 30 August 2016.
  12. ^ "Most watched game in Origin history". nrl.com. 5 July 2012. Retrieved 9 July 2012.

2012, state, origin, series, 31st, time, annual, best, three, series, between, queensland, south, wales, rugby, league, teams, played, entirely, under, state, origin, rules, fourth, successive, year, queensland, victory, record, consecutive, state, origin, tit. The 2012 State of Origin series was the 31st time the annual best of three series between the Queensland and New South Wales rugby league teams was played entirely under state of origin rules For the fourth successive year a Queensland victory set a new record for consecutive State of Origin titles reaching seven Game I was played at Melbourne s sold out Etihad Stadium and won by Queensland its television broadcast watched by more than 2 5 million viewers rating it as the most watched State of Origin broadcast since the introduction of OzTAM ratings in 1999 1 New South Wales series equalling win in Game II played at Sydney s sold out ANZ Stadium set a new TV ratings record for most watched second game of any series in State of Origin history 2 The decider Game III was played at Brisbane s Suncorp Stadium and was won by Queensland 3 This game set a new record for the highest television audience in Australia for a rugby league match since the introduction of the OzTam ratings system in 2001 4 2012 State of Origin seriesWon byQueensland 17th title Series margin2 1Points scored97Attendance191 569 ave 63 856 per match Player of the seriesNate MylesTop points scorer s Johnathan Thurston 22Top try scorer s Darius Boyd Brett Stewart Both 3 2011 State of Origin series 2013 In 2012 the first year of the independent Australian Rugby League Commission a new rule was put into place that would set out earlier in a player s career which was his state of origin 5 For the second successive year Queensland hosted Game III and New South Wales hosted Game II typically the states would alternate the hosting of these games Ricky Stuart stepped down as New South Wales head coach after the series in August shortly after signing a contract to coach the Parramatta Eels from 2013 onwards Later in the year New South Wales player of the series was named hooker Robbie Farah 2012 also saw the inaugural Under 20s State of Origin match which was played at Centerbet Stadium with New South Wales taking out the Darren Lockyer Shield against Queensland Contents 1 Game I 2 Game II 3 Game III 4 Teams 4 1 New South Wales Blues 4 2 Queensland Maroons 5 Under 20s 6 Women s State of Origin 7 ReferencesGame I editThe opening game for the New South Wales Blues saw Todd Carney James Tamou Tony Williams and Jamie Buhrer make their debuts with all either having previous international representative or grand final experience Michael Jennings was the first Origin player in 29 years to be selected to the squad after playing in the reserve grades where he was dropped from the Penrith Panthers for one game due to poor off field discipline Jamie Buhrer from the Manly Sea Eagles was generally the shock selection in the squad only playing for City Origin earlier in the year as his sole representative honour and was yet to play 50 games for his club but was selected due to his big game experience having played in Manly s winning 2011 NRL Grand Final team and his high utility value to replace their recognised utility in Kurt Gidley who was unable to play in the 2012 series to due a season long injury Only 9 of the selected 17 players were incumbent from Game Three in 2011 Queensland s selected side for the first game was largely unchanged from the 2011 series with only four changes made Their only debutant was Matt Gillett from the Brisbane Broncos to play a utility role from the bench It was hooker Cameron Smith s first match and series as the permanent captain for his state having previously filled in for the role only in Darren Lockyer s absence Wednesday 23 May 201220 00 New South Wales nbsp 10 18 nbsp Queensland Tries Uate 6 1 Jennings 43 1 Goals Carney 1 3 44 report Game details Tries 2 27 40 Boyd1 73 Inglis Goals3 3 Thurston 28 40 74 Etihad Stadium MelbourneAttendance 56 021Referee Ben Cummins Matt CecchinPlayer of the Match Nate Myles Queensland 1st halfNew South Wales held most of the momentum early in the match and scored first through winger Akuila Uate in the sixth minute of the match who recovered a bomb kick and scored in the corner Todd Carney missed the conversion and New South Wales led 4 0 In the twenty first minute a brawl erupted Blues centre Michael Jennings who ran some distance to leap into the brawl and punch Brent Tate in the head was sent to the sin bin for ten minutes The Maroons scored shortly afterwards with winger Darius Boyd touching down in the corner and Johnathan Thurston converting to give Queensland a 6 4 lead Boyd scored again in the thirty eighth minute and another successful conversion from Thurston gave Queensland a 12 4 lead at halftime 6 2nd halfNew South Wales added points early in the second half with Jennings scoring a try from a bomb kick Carney s successful conversion brought the score to 12 10 New South Wales had most of the attack during the second half but Queensland was able to defend its goal line and prevent the Blues from scoring and in the fifty second minute Carney narrowly missed a long range penalty goal attempt which would have levelled the scores at twelve apiece but after seventy minutes Queensland still led 12 10 6 After a repeat set of six in the seventy third minute Maroons centre Greg Inglis crossed the line in controversial circumstances after recovering the ball from a cross field kick Inglis lost control of the ball when it contacted the boot of Blues hooker Robbie Farah before regathering and grounding in goal After a lengthy review the video referee awarded a try he ruled that Farah had intentionally played at and kicked the ball out of Inglis hands and that Inglis loss of control was therefore not a knock on The try was converted and there was no further score giving Queensland 18 10 victory 7 The decision to award the try to Inglis was highly controversial Blues captain Paul Gallen argued vehemently with the referee onfield following the decision although was more circumspect after the match 8 Inglis controversial try saw him pass Dale Shearer to become the all time leading try scorer in State of Origin football 9 Michael Jennings received a one match suspension for the punch for which he was sin binned during the match 10 It was Queensland s fourth Game One victory in a row the first time either team had achieved the feat citation needed After the controversial Inglis try call and others during the game New South Wales coach Ricky Stuart asked his players not to give interviews to media in the lead up to Game II although the ban was lifted after two days 11 The decision was officially endorsed by referees coach Bill Harrigan the following day 7 Game II editThe two players to enter the New South Wales squad for the second game of the series were Anthony Watmough and Tim Grant with Grant making his debut Grant was included to partner James Tamou as starting props with captain Paul Gallen moved back to his preferred position at lock and Greg Bird subsequently shifted to second row with Luke Lewis to the bench to replace Jamie Buhrer Watmough replaces Tony Williams who was not selected due to a sustained injury The announced Queensland side remained unchanged however afterwards Sam Thaiday was forced to withdraw due to injury and was replaced by David Taylor allowing Corey Parker to enter the squad Wednesday 13 June 201220 00 New South Wales nbsp 16 12 nbsp Queensland Tries B Stewart 26 45 2 J Morris 48 1 Goals Carney 2 4 43 46 Report Game details Tries 1 40 Hannant1 62 Inglis Goals2 2 Thurston 40 63 ANZ Stadium SydneyAttendance 83 110Referee Tony Archer Ben CumminsPlayer of the Match Greg Bird 1st halfGame 2 saw a very physical contest between the two sides New South Wales dominated possession and Brett Stewart scored the first try of the game in the corner after around 25 minutes giving New South Wales a 4 0 lead A late converted try by Ben Hannant after a bomb kick was misread by the New South Wales backline saw Queensland lead 6 4 at half time 2nd halfTwo minutes into the second half Cooper Cronk was sin binned for a professional foul which denied Todd Carney the opportunity to score under the posts from a grubber kick Carney converted a penalty goal to level the scores at 6 6 Billy Slater and Corey Parker then suffered game changing injuries as the Maroons struggled to keep up with the Blues pace New South Wales scored two quick tries during Cronk s period in the sin bin with both Brett Stewart scoring a 50 metre try following a break by Carney and Josh Morris scoring after a break by Jarryd Hayne Johnathan Thurston had stripped Hayne of the ball which travelled forward Morris picked the ball up and out paced Greg Inglis in a 40 metre sprint to score this gave New South Wales a 16 6 lead From there Queensland began to have the better of possession and won several repeat sets from goal line dropouts Greg Inglis scored a try in the 62nd minute the conversion bringing the score back to 16 12 Brent Tate almost scored a try in the 70th minute but Michael Jennings knocked the ball out of his grasp in the in goal area to save the try There were no further points in the game and New South Wales won the game 16 12 to level the series Game III editInjury concerns to both squads forced their respective coaches to name extended squads for the decider Glenn Stewart was the main injury concern for New South Wales as was Billy Slater likewise for Queensland Both players were not available for the game For NSW Beau Scott replaced the injured Stewart whilst Brett Morris was chosen over Akuila Uate and Tony Williams returned replacing Trent Merrin Greg Inglis was selected to replace Slater although Matthew Bowen and Darius Boyd were also considered as replacements Inglis s centre spot was filled by Dane Nielson whilst Corey Parker took Ashley Harrison s lock position as Harrison was ruled out from injury Sam Thaiday returned to the run on squad and Ben Te o was considered over David Taylor on the bench Wednesday 4 July 201220 00 Queensland nbsp 21 20 nbsp New South Wales Tries Boyd 19 1 Thurston 32 1 Hodges 35 1 Goals Thurston 4 5 33 36 52 pen 64 pen Field goals Cronk 75 1 Report Game details Tries 1 13 B Morris1 47 Stewart 1 70 J Morris Goals4 4 Carney 7 pen 14 49 71 Suncorp Stadium BrisbaneAttendance 52 437Referee Tony Archer Ben CumminsPlayer of the Match Johnathan Thurston Queensland 1st half New South Wales scored first with a penalty goal by Todd Carney and then ran in the first try of the match in the 13th minute scored by Brett Morris and converted by Carney for an early lead of 8 points to nil Queensland s Darius Boyd scored out wide after 19 minutes from a cut out pass from Johnathan Thurston Thirteen minutes later from deep in Queensland s half Thurston broke through an attempted Mitchell Pearce tackle and raced 35m up field before finding Brent Tate and Cooper Cronk in support two tackles later Thurston accepted an offload from Corey Parker to score close to the posts New South Wales then kicked the restart into touch on the full and three tackles later Justin Hodges scored a controversial try beside the posts after calls from New South Wales players for obstruction were denied by the video referee Thurston converted his own and Hodges tries and the score at the half time break was 16 8 in favour of the Maroons 2nd half Seven minutes into the second half Brett Stewart pounced on a Robbie Farah grubber kick into the Queensland in goal and scored his third try of the series for the Blues just before the ball went dead Carney converted the try to reduce the margin to 16 14 The next two scores were both Queensland penalty goals kicked by Thurston one in the 49th minute and one in the 64th minute to make the score 20 14 In the 70th minute Josh Morris scored a try in the corner following a perfectly placed cross field kick by Robbie Farah Morris showing great skill to out jump Darius Boyd and score before sliding into touch Todd Carney then converted the kick from the sideline to even up the match at 20 points each Maroons halfback Cooper Cronk kicked a field goal from 40m out to put Queensland ahead by one point with six minutes remaining Mitchell Pearce then missed a long range field goal in the final minute to give the Maroons a one point victory and their seventh successive State of Origin series victory Nate Myles was awarded the Wally Lewis Medal for best player in the series while Johnathan Thurston playing his 24th consecutive Origin match since debut won his fifth Man of the Match award Johnathan Thurston s try in the 32nd minute of Game III saw him pass former New South Wales player Michael O Connor 1985 91 as the second highest point scorer in Origin history This game set a new record for the highest television audience in Australia for a rugby league match since the introduction of the OzTam ratings system in 2001 and the 2nd highest OzTam rated television audience in Australian television history Games 1 and 2 were the 5th and 6th most watched respectively This includes a record 421 000 viewership in Melbourne for Game 3 more than all the previous month s Friday Night AFL matches and up 100 000 from the previous record set for Game 2 12 Teams editThe 18th amp 19th man are reserves to cover for any forthcoming injuries and unless chosen do not actually play New South Wales Blues edit Position Game 1 Game 2 Game 3 Fullback nbsp Brett Stewart Wing nbsp Jarryd Hayne Centre nbsp Michael Jennings Centre nbsp Josh Morris Wing nbsp Akuila Uate nbsp Brett Morris Five Eighth nbsp Todd Carney Halfback nbsp Mitchell Pearce Prop nbsp Paul Gallen c nbsp Tim Grant Hooker nbsp Robbie Farah Prop nbsp James Tamou 2nd Row nbsp Luke Lewis nbsp Greg Bird 2nd Row nbsp Glenn Stewart nbsp Beau Scott 2 Lock nbsp Greg Bird nbsp Paul Gallen c Interchange nbsp Trent Merrin nbsp Tony Williams Interchange nbsp Jamie Buhrer nbsp Luke Lewis Interchange nbsp Ben Creagh Interchange nbsp Tony Williams nbsp Anthony Watmough Coach Ricky Stuart 18th Man nbsp Aaron Woods 1 nbsp Jamie Buhrer nbsp Trent Merrin 19th Man nbsp Joseph Leilua nbsp Akuila Uate 1 Tariq Sims was originally selected but withdrew due to injury He was replaced by Aaron Woods 2 Glenn Stewart was originally selected to play but withdrew due to injury He was replaced by Beau Scott Queensland Maroons edit Queensland s team for the 2012 campaign featured one debutante in Brisbane utility Matt Gillett No changes were made to the successful Game I team until Sam Thaiday was forced out when a shoulder injury failed to respond to treatment before Game II This brought David Taylor into the starting side and Corey Parker onto the bench Position Game 1 Game 2 Game 3 Fullback nbsp Billy Slater nbsp Greg Inglis 2 Wing nbsp Darius Boyd Centre nbsp Greg Inglis nbsp Dane Nielsen 2 Centre nbsp Justin Hodges Wing nbsp Brent Tate Five eighth nbsp Johnathan Thurston Halfback nbsp Cooper Cronk Prop forward nbsp Matthew Scott Hooker nbsp Cameron Smith c Prop nbsp Petero Civoniceva 2nd row nbsp Nate Myles 2nd row nbsp Sam Thaiday nbsp David Taylor 1 nbsp Sam Thaiday Lock nbsp Ashley Harrison nbsp Corey Parker Interchange nbsp Matt Gillett Interchange nbsp David Taylor nbsp Corey Parker 1 nbsp Ben Te o Interchange nbsp Ben Hannant Interchange nbsp David Shillington Coach Mal Meninga 18th man nbsp Daly Cherry Evans nbsp Dallas Johnson nbsp Matt Bowen 19th man nbsp Dane Nielson nbsp Ben Barba nbsp Dave Taylor 1 Sam Thaiday was originally selected to play but withdrew due to a shoulder injury He was replaced by interchange forward David Taylor whilst Corey Parker was called onto the bench 2 Billy Slater was originally selected to play but withdrew due to a knee injury sustained during Game II He was replaced by Greg Inglis whilst Dane Nielson came into the centres for Inglis Under 20s editThe 2012 Under 20s State of Origin was the introduction of the State Of Origin concept to the Holden Cup New South Wales win the inaugural Darren Lockyer Shield April 21 201219 30 New South Wales nbsp 18 14 nbsp Queensland TriesEvans 1Mata utia1Siejka1GoalsSiejka 3 3 Report TriesWhitchurch 1Lee 2GoalsFrei 1 3 Centerbet Stadium SydneyAttendance 5 105Referee Dave MunroPlayer of the Match Harry SiejkaWomen s State of Origin edit2 May 201518 00 Local nbsp New South Wales v Queensland nbsp Centrebet Stadium PenrithReferences edit Knox David 24 May 2012 2 5m watch as State of Origin breaks records TV Tonight Retrieved 24 May 2012 State of Origin helps Nine to big win mUmBRELLA 14 June 2012 Retrieved 16 June 2012 2012 rugby league fixtures The Sydney Morning Herald Fairfax Media Retrieved 31 March 2012 Ellis Scott 5 July 2012 Origin clash smashes ratings records The Age Fairfax Digital Retrieved 9 July 2012 Rothfield Phil 31 March 2012 NRL moves to block Queensland s Origin selection rorts The Daily Telegraph Retrieved 31 March 2012 a b Pritchard Greg 24 May 2012 Origin I The eight key moments Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 24 May 2012 a b Harrigan Bill 24 May 2012 Official view Inglis try was fair says Harrigan National Rugby League Retrieved 24 May 2012 Barrett Chris 24 May 2012 Are you for real Gallen blue in the face after referees calls Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 24 May 2012 Read Brent 24 May 2012 Enraged NSW cries Blue burder after State of Origin opener The Australian Retrieved 24 May 2012 Jennings cops one week ban Sydney Morning Herald 24 May 2012 Retrieved 24 May 2012 Walter Brad Analyst blows whistle on Maroons dirty play Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 30 August 2016 Most watched game in Origin history nrl com 5 July 2012 Retrieved 9 July 2012 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2012 State of Origin series amp oldid 1036742365, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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