1990 State of Origin series
1990 State of Origin series | |
---|---|
Won by | File:New South Wales colours.svg New South Wales (3rd title) |
Series margin | 2 - 1 |
Points scored | 50 |
Attendance | 98,451 (ave. 32,817 per match) |
Top points scorer(s) | File:Queensland colours.svg Gary Belcher (8) |
Top try scorer(s) | File:New South Wales colours.svg Mark McGaw (2) |
The 1990 State of Origin series saw the ninth time that the annual three-game series between New South Wales and Queensland representative rugby league football teams was contested entirely under "state of origin" selection rules. It was the first year that the Australian Rugby League took an Origin match to Melbourne to showcase the code in Victoria. New South Wales broke an eight-game losing streak in game I and took the series for the first time since 1986.
Games
Game One
Wednesday, 9 May 1990
|
New South Wales File:New South Wales colours.svg | 8–0 | File:Queensland colours.svg Queensland |
---|---|---|
(4 - 1 t) Mark McGaw (4 - 2 g) Michael O'Connor |
(Report) |
Sydney Football Stadium, Sydney
Attendance: 41,235 Referee: David Manson Player of the Match: Ben Elias |
Game I at the Sydney Football Stadium was a typical Origin arm-wrestle and resulted in the lowest score in the series' 10-year history to that point. Queensland's Wally Lewis withdrew pre-match due to a hamstring tear (only the 2nd Origin match he had missed in the series' history), Maroon's hero Gene Miles had retired and Tony Currie, Michael Hancock and Kerrod Walters were all out with injuries. New South Wales' captain Benny Elias played what was regarded as his finest representative performance [citation needed] with a copybook dummy-half display. Blues' centre Mark "Sparkles" McGaw scored the only try of the match. He outplayed his opposite, the Mal Meninga and pulled off a covering tackle on winger Alan McIndoe that was so comprehensive that both McIndoe's boots came flying from his feet. The win was the Blues' first since the post-series exhibition match in 1987.
Game Two
Wednesday, 30 May 1990
|
New South Wales File:New South Wales colours.svg | 12–6 | File:Queensland colours.svg Queensland |
---|---|---|
(4 - 1 t) Ricky Stuart (4 - 1 t) Brad Mackay (4 - 2 g) Rod Wishart |
(Report) |
Les Kiss (4 - 1 t) Mal Meninga (2 - 1 g) |
The public relations exercise to showcase the game in Melbourne proved a success with a sell-out crowd of 25,800 cramming into Olympic Park. The game was highlighted by NSW halfback Ricky Stuart racing 70 metres to score, easily outpacing Qld winger Les Kiss who made no ground on the former Wallaby. Queensland halfback Allan Langer's stealing of the ball from Blues replacement prop Glenn Lazarus[2] helped spell the end of three years of Queensland State of Origin dominance which had included two consecutive series clean sweeps from 1988. Langer's steal was a defining moment giving Rod Wishart the chance to put the Blues ahead 8-6. Shortly afterwards Brad Mackay swooped on an intercept and streaked away for the try that put the game out of reach for the Maroons.
Game Three
Wednesday, 13 June 1990
|
Queensland File:Queensland colours.svg | 14–10 | File:New South Wales colours.svg New South Wales |
---|---|---|
(8 - 1 t, 2 g) Gary Belcher (4 - 1 t) Steve Jackson (2 - 1 g) Wally Lewis |
(Report) |
Glenn Lazarus (4 - 1 t) Mark McGaw (4 - 1 t) Rod Wishart (2 - 1 g) |
In Game III the Blues led 10-4 after just 24 minutes and looked set for a series whitewash. Then the Maroons clawed back to 10-all early in the second half with their Origin "King" Wally Lewis landing a wide conversion after Gary Belcher had taken the earlier kicks. Western Suburbs Magpies' forward Steve Jackson who the year before had scored a Grand Final try to give his club the Canberra Raiders the premiership, scored an almost identical try to give Queensland the game and a face-saving sole victory in the series.
Teams
New South Wales
Queensland
See also
References
- ↑ MacDonald, John (30 May 1990). "No more Blues for Benny's Boys". The Sydney Morning Herald. Australia: Fairfax Media. Retrieved 10 August 2010.
- ↑ Steve Ricketts; Barry Dick; Paul Malone (23 May 2012). "The 30 greatest controversies in 30 years of State of Origin series". The Courier-Mail. Retrieved 26 May 2012.
Sources
- Big League's 25 Years of Origin Collectors' Edition, News Magazines, Surry Hills, Sydney