The best. Anywhere. I’ll tell a man it was

Columnist and author

Has there ever been a football match of such intensity? I mean,ofanycode,anywhere in theworld,EVER?

And yes,with the series locked at 1-1 with a rampant NSW in Origin III looking to put it away on Queensland turf for the decider,it was always going to be a tough encounter. Butthis tough,for so long?

Andrew Johns has ranked the Blues' game three Suncorp Stadium victory as one of the state's best.

From the opening whistle,Queensland threw everything at NSW bar the ref’s whistle – with three and often four men in tackle after tackle,driving them backwards – and if anything it only got more intense as the first half progressed.

No matter that NSW had 60 per cent possession and were constantly threatening the Queensland line,every time it seemed like they must score,the Blue jersey was swamped bytidal Maroon coverage.

But could they keep it up?

It was obvious to me,and more particularly Andrew Johns in commentary after just seven minutes. Surely,the game must open up through inevitable fatigue,and yet even after 17 minutes Johns was obliged to note in wonder,that the game was “still as physical now as in the opening tackle”.

Zac Lomax celebrates with the Blues after winning State of Origin.

Zac Lomax celebrates with the Blues after winning State of Origin.Getty

This wasn’t “hand-to-hand trench warfare” as the cliche goes,this was two Sherman tanks face-to-face blasting each other to near oblivion.

The brawl with 10 minutes to go in the first half was reminiscent of the famous orders of NSW Blues coach Tommy Raudonikis three decades ago:“And when the stink breaks out,I wanteveryone in,the bench cleared,and I’ll go looking for Bennett!”

For when the brawl did indeed break out – starting from argy-bargy and a couple of facepalms between Jarome Luai and Daly Cherry-Evans – the bench was cleared,and it was the Blues’ Cam Murray sin-binned off for 10 minutes from that very bench for his trouble.

For his part,even the NSW 19th man Haumole Olakau’atu – dressed in a blazer and chinos – couldn’t help himself from getting involved,and though he couldn’t be sent off from a game he wasn’t actually in,he was at leastexpelled from the sidelines. This was the first time in Origin history that such things had occurred,and much of the rest of the match seemed unprecedented,too,just in terms of that sheer,unrelenting,ferocity.

Phil Gould has broken down the difference between Reece Walsh and Dylan Edwards after the latter's man of the match performance.

With 30 seconds remaining in the half,the whole thing was reminiscent of the famous lines from Banjo Paterson in the Geebung Polo Club:

And the game was so terrific that ere half the time was gone
A spectator’s leg was broken — just from merely looking on.
For they waddied one another till the plain was strewn with dead,
While the score was kept so even that they neither got ahead.

The score at that point,as it happened was still 0-0 despite NSW enjoying such a huge territorial and possessive advantage. In some ways,the penalty goal scored by Queensland on the bell,to go to a 2-0 lead,while a fitting reward for their extraordinary efforts,was a pity. A 0-0 scoreline at the break would have been emblematic of the match,and forever an exemplar how football doesn’t need tries to be absorbing.

In the second half,we knew it must open up from the opening stanza,and it didn’t.

So impregnable were both lines – sheer,towering maroon and blue walls that both sides were battering themselves against to no avail – that it was clear there might be only one way to win this bastard. Usually,rugby league sides eschew the possibility of penalty goals in favour of going for the try,but not this time. First NSW and then Queensland took their chance when they could,meaning the locals were in front 4-2 with 15 minutes to go.

And then,finally,the breakthroughs with two great NSW tries to Bradman Best and Mitchell Moses taking the score to a great NSW 14-4 victory for the match,and a fabulous 2-1 win for the series.

This was Origin at its very best,and football as good as it gets. Congrats to both teams,and particularly NSW. To survive that Queensland assault,in Queensland,and emerge victorious will be surely the Everest of those players’ footballing careers.

NRL is Live and Free on Channel 9&9Now

Sports news,results and expert commentary. Sign up for our Sport newsletter.

Peter FitzSimons is a journalist and columnist with The Sydney Morning Herald.

Most Viewed in Sport