Northern Edition

Select Edition

Northern Northern
Southern Southern
Global Global
New Zealand New Zealand
France France

Maroons lock recalled for Origin II while Cowboys winger handed debut

(Photo by Chris Hyde/Getty Images)

Recalled Queensland forward Jai Arrow has earned his State of Origin redemption shot while Murray Taulagi will debut as the Maroons aim to seal the series in Perth.

ADVERTISEMENT

Arrow’s Origin future was clouded after he was axed from camp Maroon last season for breaching COVID-19 protocols.

The South Sydney workhorse was 18th man for the Maroons’ Origin I victory, but has been included as one of two additions to Billy Slater’s side to play at Optus Stadium on Sunday.

Related

Powerful North Queensland winger Taulagi is the other change, the 23-year-old in for injured Melbourne flyer Xavier Coates.

Arrow will replace Lindsay Collins on the bench who will move into the starting forward pack.

Tino Fa’asuamaleaui will shift from prop to fill the void left by injured lock Reuben Cotter, whose herculean 80-minute effort in the middle on debut helped set up Queensland’s 16-10 upset win.

The South Sydney forward’s decision to invite a woman into the team’s Gold Coast camp last year breached the NRL’s strict COVID-19 protocols and prompted a fine and suspension from Origin III.

However new coach Slater absolved Arrow of his sins during a pre-series heart-to-heart and the 26-year-old is now poised to play the 10th game for his state.

ADVERTISEMENT

Brisbane winger Corey Oates and underrated Gold Coast backrower Beau Fermor have been added to the extended squad, while Reece Walsh replaced Hamiso Tabuai-Fidow (HIA) in Slater’s only changes forced by injuries in stark contrast to his NSW opposite.

Despite the narrow margin in the series opener, the Blues have made seven changes to their squad and are poised to make five changes to their 17 for the Optus Stadium rematch.

The win in Sydney was Queensland’s first since 2017 and has put them in the box seat to blunt any notion of a Blues Origin stranglehold with a second series victory in five years.

ADVERTISEMENT

QUEENSLAND TEAM FOR ORIGIN II: Kalyn Ponga, Selywn Cobbo, Valentine Holmes, Dane Gagai, Murray Taulagi, Cameron Munster, Daly Cherry-Evans (capt), Lindsay Collins, Ben Hunt, Josh Papalii, Kurt Capewell, Felise Kaufusi, Tino Fa’asuamaleaui. Interchange: Harry Grant, Patrick Carrigan, Jai Arrow, Jeremiah Nanai. Reserves: Tom Dearden, Beau Fermor, Thomas Flegler, Reece Walsh, Corey Oates.

ADVERTISEMENT

LIVE

{{item.title}}

Trending on RugbyPass

Comments

0 Comments
Be the first to comment...

Join free and tell us what you really think!

Sign up for free
ADVERTISEMENT

Latest Features

Comments on RugbyPass

S
SK 8 hours ago
What is the future of rugby in 2025?

Set pieces are important and the way teams use them is a great indication of how they play the game. No team is showcasing their revolution more than the Springboks. This year they have mauled less and primarily in the attacking third. Otherwise they have tended to set like they are going to maul and then play around the corner or shove the ball out the back. They arent also hitting the crash ball carrier constantly but instead they are choosing to use their width or a big carrying forward in wider areas. While their maul is varied the scrum is still a blunt instrument winning penalties before the backs have a go. Some teams have chosen to blunt their set piece game for more control. The All Blacks are kicking more penalties and are using their powerful scrum as an attacking tool choosing that set piece as an attacking weapon. Their willingness to maul more and in different positions is also becoming more prominent. The French continue to play conservative rugby off the set piece using their big bruisers frequently. The set piece is used differently by different teams. Different teams play different ways and can be successful regardless. They can win games with little territory and possession or smash teams with plenty of both. The game of rugby is for all types and sizes and thats true in the modern era. I hope that administrators keep it that way and dont go further towards a Rugby League style situation. Some administrators are of the opinion that rugby is too slow and needs to be sped up. Why not rather empower teams to choose how they want to play and create a framework that favours neither size nor agility. That favours neither slow tempo play or rock n roll rugby. Create a game that favour both and challenge teams to execute their plans. If World Rugby can create a game like that then it will be the ultimate winner.

35 Go to comments
TRENDING
TRENDING ‘It’s about his career’: Why NRL star Payne Haas could jump codes ‘It’s about his career’: Why NRL star Payne Haas could jump codes
Search