The Blues
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About this ebook
The Blues tells the back stories to the 300-plus New South Welshmen who have contested the legendary State of Origin series.
This is more than a rugby league book. It's a book about the children of immigrants, military personnel, farmers and factory workers. It's the story of Indigenous kids and boys from the bush who were told they were not good enough. And the story of those seemingly always destined for greatness.
Best-author Alan Whiticker delves into the lives and careers of every player to pull on a sky-blue jersey and face the might of the Maroons in league's elite competition.
The Blues: NSW's State of Origin Heroes is the companion title to Gelding Street Press's The Maroons by Robert Burgin.
Alan Whiticker
"Alan Whiticker was born in Sydney, Australia, in 1958. Pursuing the dual careers of teacher and freelance writer, he emerged as an award-winning author of sport, history, biography and true crime. In 1997, he completed a Master's Degree in Education and lectured at the University of Western Sydney in 2008. He then worked as an author, commissioning editor and publisher. Now a fulltime writer, Alan lives in Penrith with wife Karen, with whom he has two adult children, Timothy and Melanie. A lifelong racing fan, Alan is also the author of Immortals of Australian Horse Racing: the Thoroughbreds,"
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The Blues - Alan Whiticker
For Barry Ross (1941–2023), who loved the game of rugby league and the camaraderie of all sports people.
I wish to acknowledge the First Nations people as traditional owners of the land that this book was inspired by, conceived and written about. I acknowledge Elders past, present and emerging.
First Nations people are advised that this publication may contain references to people who have passed away.
A Gelding Street Press book
An imprint of Rockpool Publishing
PO Box 252
Summer Hill
NSW 2130
Australia
www.geldingstreetpress.com
ISBN: 9780645207033
Published in 2024 by Rockpool Publishing
Copyright text © Alan Whiticker
Copyright design © Rockpool Publishing 2024
Copyright photos © NRL Imagery (cover), Newspix (internal colour images, spine and 1980 b&w team shot) and Ian Collis (b&w internal images).
Design and typesetting by Christine Armstrong, Rockpool Publishing
Acquisition editor: Luke West, Rockpool Publishing
Edited by Daniel Williams
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the publisher.
CONTENTS
Introduction
1. Tom Raudonikis
2. Chris Anderson
3. Greg Brentnall
4. Bob Cooper
5. Mick Cronin
6. Graham Eadie
7. Steve Edge
8. Gary Hambly
9. Jim Leis
10. Steve Rogers
11. Alan Thompson
12. Graeme Wynn
13. Craig Young
14. Robert Stone
15. Steve Bowden
16. Les Boyd
17. Terry Fahey
18. Eric Grothe Sr
19. Ron Hilditch
20. Barry Jensen
21. Terry Lamb
22. Ray Price
23. Phil Sigsworth
24. Peter Sterling
25. Peter Tunks
26. Garry Dowling
27. Max Krilich
28. John Coveney
29. Steve Mortimer
30. John Muggleton
31. Ziggy Niszczot
32. Tony Rampling
33. Royce Ayliffe
34. Brad Izzard
35. Tony Melrose
36. Brett Kenny
37. Phillip Duke
38. Don McKinnon
39. Paul Merlo
40. Geoff Bugden
41. Geoff Gerard
42. Wayne Pearce
43. Ray Brown
44. Steve Ella
45. Paul Field
46. Marty Gurr
47. Neil Hunt
48. Lindsay Johnston
49. Gavin Miller
50. Stan Jurd
51. Kevin Hastings
52. Noel Cleal
53. Ross Conlon
54. Garry Jack
55. Steve Roach
56. Rex Wright
57. Brian Hetherington
58. Pat Jarvis
59. Andrew Farrar
60. Royce Simmons
61. Brian Johnston
62. Steve Morris
63. Chris Mortimer
64. Chris Walsh
65. Peter Wynn
66. Michael Potter
67. Benny Elias
68. John Ferguson
69. Michael O’Connor
70. David Brooks
71. Des Hasler
72. Steve Folkes
73. David Gillespie
74. Les Davidson
75. Andrew Ettingshausen
76. Mark McGaw
77. David Boyle
78. Paul Langmack
79. Phil Daley
80. Cliff Lyons
81. Jonathan Docking
82. David Trewhella
83. Paul Dunn
84. Steve Hanson
85. Greg Florimo
86. John Cartwright
87. Bradley Clyde
88. Laurie Daley
89. Mario Fenech
90. Chris Johns
91. Paul Sironen
92. Greg Alexander
93. Glenn Lazarus
94. Peter Kelly
95. Bruce McGuire
96. Brad Mackay
97. Alan Wilson
98. Mark Geyer
99. Phil Blake
100. Terry Matterson
101. Ian Roberts
102. Ricky Stuart
103. Ricky Walford
104. Rod Wishart
105. Graham Lyons
106. Geoff Toovey
107. Brad Fittler
108. Mark Sargent
109. David Fairleigh
110. Craig Salvatori
111. Paul Harragon
112. Graham Mackay
113. Paul McGregor
114. John Simon
115. Robbie McCormack
116. Steve Carter
117. Tim Brasher
118. Jason Croker
119. Jason Taylor
120. Scott Gourley
121. Terry Hill
122. David Barnhiill
123. Brett Mullins
124. Dean Pay
125. Ken Nagas
126. Mark Carroll
127. Craig Hancock
128. Andrew Johns
129. Matthew Johns
130. Steve Menzies
131. Jim Serdaris
132. Adam Muir
133. Matt Seers
134. John Hopoate
135. Brett Rodwell
136. David Hall
137. David Furner
138. Jamie Ainscough
139. Jim Dymock
140. Nik Kosef
141. Ken McGuinness
142. Trent Barrett
143. Michael Buettner
144. Rodney Howe
145. Adam MacDougall
146. Tony Butterfield
147. Robbie Kearns
148. Darren Albert
149. Bryan Fletcher
150. Matt Geyer
151. Craig Gower
152. Robbie Ross
153. Jason Stevens
154. Ryan Girdler
155. Anthony Mundine
156. Luke Ricketson
157. Ben Kennedy
158. Michael Vella
159. Brett Kimmorley
160. David Peachey
161. Shaun Timmins
162. Scott Hill
163. Matthew Gidley
164. Michael De Vere
165. Nathan Hindmarsh
166. Mark Hughes
167. Luke Priddis
168. Mark O’Meley
169. Matt Adamson
170. Andrew Ryan
171 Luke Bailey
172. Danny Buderus
173. Brett Hodgson
174. Jamie Lyon
175. Jason Moodie
176. Steve Simpson
177. Timana Tahu
178. Braith Anasta
179. Jason Ryles
180. Craig Fitzgibbon
181. Anthony Minichiello
182. Phil Bailey
183. Josh Perry
184. Craig Wing
185. Willie Mason
186. Ben Hornby
187. Luke Lewis
188. Ryan O’Hara
189. Luke Rooney
190. Brent Kite
191. Trent Waterhouse
192. Brett Finch
193. Matt Cooper
194. Mark Gasnier
195. Matt King
196. Anthony Watmough
197. Eric Grothe Jr
198. Luke O’Donnell
199. Paul Gallen
200. Jarryd Hayne
201. Jarrod Mullen
202. Brett White
203. Kurt Gidley
204. Anthony Tupou
205. Brett Stewart
206. Greg Bird
207. Ryan Hoffman
208. Hazem El Masri
209. Ben Cross
210. Anthony Quinn
211. Peter Wallace
212. Anthony Laffranchi
213. Steve Turner
214. Joel Monaghan
215. Mitchell Pearce
216. Michael Jennings
217. James McManus
218. Terry Campese
219. Robbie Farah
220. Ben Creagh
221. Justin Poore
222. Glenn Stewart
223. Michael Weyman
224. David Williams
225 & 228. Josh & Brett Morris
226. Michael Ennis
227. Tom Learoyd-Lahrs
229. Jamal Idris
230. Beau Scott
231. Michael Gordon
232. Jason King
233. Kade Snowden
234. Tim Mannah
235. Josh Dugan
236. Trent Merrin
237. Jamie Soward
238. Akuila Uate
239. Dean Young
240. Will Hopoate
241. Keith Galloway
242. Todd Carney
243. James Tamou
244. Jamie Buhrer
245. Tony Williams
246. Tim Grant
247. Blake Ferguson
248. James Maloney
249. Andrew Fifita
250. Josh Reynolds
251. Nathan Merritt
252. Aaron Woods
253. Boyd Cordner
254. Trent Hodkinson
255. Daniel Tupou
256. Josh Jackson
257. David Klemmer
258. Matt Moylan
259. Josh Mansour
260. Adam Reynolds
261. Dylan Walker
262. Tyson Frizell
263. Jack Bird
264. James Tedesco
265. Wade Graham
266. Nathan Peats
267. Jake Trbojevic
268. Tom Trbojevic
269. Latrell Mitchell
270. James Roberts
271. Josh Addo-Carr
272. Nathan Cleary
273. Damien Cook
274. Reagan Campbell-Gillard
275. Jack De Belin
276. Paul Vaughan
277. Angus Crichton
278. Tyrone Peachey
279. Matt Prior
280. Tariq Sims
281. Nick Cotric
282. Cody Walker
283. Jack Wighton
284. Payne Haas
285. Cameron Murray
286. Daniel Saifiti
287. Dale Finucane
288. Clint Gutherson
289. Luke Keary
290. Junior Paulo
291. Nathan Brown
292. Isaah Yeo
293. Jarome Luai
294. Brian To’o
295. Liam Martin
296. Mitchell Moses
297. Api Koroisau
298. Stephen Crichton
299. Kotoni Staggs
300. Ryan Matterson
301. Matt Burton
302. Siosifa Talakai
303. Jacob Saifiti
304. Tevita Pangai Junior
305. Hudson Young
306. Nicho Hynes
307. Stefano Utoikamanu
308. Reece Robson
309. Bradman Best
310. Keaon Koloamatangi
State of Origin results 1980–2023
New South Wales coaching records (1980–2023)
NSW Origin records (1980–2023)
Bibliography
Acknowledgements
About the author
INTRODUCTION
Thirty years ago, I wrote the Encyclopedia of Rugby League Players with a young statistician named Glen Hudson. There was no internet available in 1993, and computers back then were little more than glorified typewriters, so it was a case of using old-school methods to encapsulate the careers of more than 8000 players dating back to 1908.
My job in writing hundreds of biographies of the game’s most notable players was not just about ticking off career highlights but trying to capture the qualities of each champion using an economy of words. These original ‘pen portraits’, as they’re known in publishing circles, were researched using newspaper reports, tour programs, magazine profiles and good old-fashioned one-on-one interviews. Over the years, and across some six published editions of the original ‘bible’ of rugby league, many of these bios have become the basis of countless Wikipedia pages and can be readily found on the internet.
So, when the good people at Gelding Street Press came to me with the idea of detailing the 300-plus players who’ve worn a NSW Origin jersey, my first thought was, Haven’t I been here before? But when they explained they wanted a companion publication to Robert Burgin’s excellent The Maroons: Queensland’s State of Origin Heroes (2023), I was intrigued. Why not flesh out the stories behind each player and document not only their impact on the Origin arena but also their motivations, quirks and frailties?
Some players have had entire books written about their careers; others, I admit, I knew very little about until researching this book. Regardless, writing between 250 and 1000 words on more than 300 players was challenging. Not so surprisingly, some players who’ve had very little Origin time also have the best backstories. For those Origin legends who’ve amassed a veritable treasure trove of awards and achievements, I endeavoured to add that human dimension – not only what makes them champions but also relatable as people.
I have been writing about rugby league for almost forty years now and have had the privilege of interviewing many of the great players in this book. I also took this opportunity to talk to past players I had not previously had the chance to meet, notably Jim Leis, Alan Thompson, Peter Wynn, Michael O’Connor, Mick Potter and Craig Gower. I am also indebted to the many journalists, podcast hosts and websites that helped tell the story of every NSW Origin player. I would not have been able to complete this book without the assistance of the Rugby League Project (www.rugbyleagueproject.org), which makes cross-referencing so many players and their careers all the easier.
I trust the reader enjoys the more than 120,000 words and 300 chapters that follow, the many personal stories and essential facts that make up the NSW Origin story. Some players have very complex legacies. In all cases, I have endeavoured to be fair and balanced, no matter how complicated or controversial their careers might have been. Play on . . .
Alan Whiticker
March 2024
The son of Lithuanian immigrants, Tom Raudonikis was born in a migrant camp in Bathurst in 1950. He was a tearaway as a child, and the nuns at his local primary school in Cowra introduced him to rugby league as a way to channel his excess energies. Young Tommy took to the game at once and modelled his halves game on St George champion Billy Smith, whom he would later replace in the NSW and Australian Test teams.
At age 18, Raudonikis joined the RAAF as an apprentice mechanic. He was playing for the Wagga Kangaroos in 1968 when he was recommended to Wests by former club great Arthur Summons, who captain-coached close rivals, the Wagga Magpies. Raudonikis spent the next decade shedding blood for the black and whites, playing a club record 202 first-grade games. He also represented NSW and Australia every season from 1971 to 1980.
There were many controversies along the way that would have ended lesser careers. On the 1973 Kangaroo Tour, Raudonikis led Australia to Ashes glory after Graeme Langlands and Bob McCarthy were injured, only to be replaced as captain in France by Arthur Beetson after almost being sent home for misbehaviour. In 1976, Raudonikis mockingly outed himself as the ‘phantom biter’ in Rugby League Week after a club game against Manly and the rugged halfback was promptly fined and banned from writing a newspaper column. Then there were the infamous face-slapping motivational tactics under coach Roy Masters in 1979 that Raudonikis embraced with both hands. Somewhat incredibly (in 1972), he was named Rothmans Medal winner as the game’s best and fairest player. Tommy? Best, sure. But fairest?
At the end of the 1979 season, he accepted a huge contract from close mate and drinking buddy John Singleton to play for the Newtown Jets. Raudonikis shocked everyone in the game when he signed a three-year deal with the cellar-dwellers, but it was the final contract of his Sydney career and few could begrudge the veteran for trying to do the best for his young family. For a man who lived with his wife and three children in a working-class home in Blacktown, the $50,000 a year contract was like winning the lottery.
In 1980, it was only fitting that ‘Tom Terrific’, one of the most tenacious competitors in the ferocious NSWRL competition, captained NSW in the inaugural State of Origin match – and yet it almost didn’t happen. Canterbury hooker George Peponis, the NSW and Australia captain at the time, was originally selected to lead the Blues in the historic match after captaining NSW to victory in Brisbane in the first interstate fixture that year. In the week leading up to the State of Origin promotion, however, Peponis was ruled out and Raudonikis promoted to captain. Interestingly, Peponis never played a State of Origin match. Raudonikis played just the one, but that game has passed into rugby league history.
During his first year at the Jets, in 1980, Tommy was selected for Australia’s short tour of New Zealand. When the touring squad returned from New Zealand, the NSWRL bowed to pressure from the QRL to play the third interstate match under State of Origin rules.
When Raudonikis led NSW onto the old Lang Park in front of more than 33,000 fervent Queenslanders, little did anyone know that a beast was about to be unleashed on the world of rugby league.
‘There was the big blue in the first five minutes,’ Raudonikis told me in 2003. ‘I just loved it. I got knocked out in the blue, but I finished the game. I don’t sort of remember the first half.’
If Raudokinis’ Blues had won that inaugural State of Origin match, it’s doubtful the Origin concept would have endured beyond 1980. In what would be Tommy’s final representative appearance, the Arthur Beetson-led Maroons won 20–10, with Tommy scoring a late try to bring NSW back into the contest.
After leading the Jets in their 20–11 loss to Parramatta in the 1981 grand final, Raudonikis saw out the remainder of his playing career in Queensland before entering the coaching ranks. In 1995, he returned to Wests to coach at a crucial time in the code’s history. When Wests qualified for the Top 8 in the crowded 20-team ARL competition, Raudonikis was invited to take over from Phil Gould as NSW coach during the divided 1997 season. With both teams ravaged by Super League defections, Tommy’s Blues recorded a 2–1 series victory over Paul Vautin’s Maroons.
That series provided Origin with another infamous chapter when Raudonikis – an old-school coach with a ruthless approach – instructed his players to start a brawl when he called out the code words ‘cattle dog’ from the sidelines. During the wild melee that followed, Blues hooker Andrew Johns was felled by his opposite Jamie Goddard and had to leave the field for medical attention. The Maroons won the fight, but the Blues took the match and the series.
At the start of the 1981 season, Raudonikis’ position as the premier halfback in the competition was under threat. With a new breed of young talent emerging – Steve Mortimer (Canterbury), Steve Morris (St George), Peter Sterling (Parramatta) and Kevin Hastings (Easts) – Raudonikis battled injury and indifferent form in what was his 13th season in the NSWRL before seeing out his career in, of all places, Queensland.
Years later, Tommy would tour clubs and hotels with his good mate Arthur Beetson to relive that historic first Origin match. He was often invited into the NSW camp to motivate a new generation of players about what State of Origin meant. Raudonikis was a rugby league original, pure and simple.
In April 2021, the rugby league community was saddened by Tommy’s passing after a long battle with cancer just days before what would have been his 71st birthday. NRL chief executive Peter V’Landys said: ‘Tommy was one of a kind. There will never be another Tommy Raudonikis. He was everything that makes rugby league the greatest game of all.’
The great irony of Tommy’s career is that his style of play would not have survived in the modern game with replays from every angle, the bunker and social media.
Thank goodness, then, that we have our memories of the 1970s and early 1980s. Tom Raudonikis was very much a man of his time who helped define rugby league as one of the toughest sports on the planet.
When Chris Anderson came down from Forbes to play with Canterbury in 1970, teammates dubbed him ‘Opie’, after the kid on The Andy Griffith Show, because he was such a country kid. He learned fast.
Derided early in his career for being the son-in-law of Bulldogs club supremo Peter ‘Bullfrog’ Moore, Anderson’s record would eventually speak for itself: 94 tries in 230 first-grade appearances for Canterbury, both club records at the time, and a dual Kangaroos tourist in 1978 and 1982.
In 1980, Anderson was in rare form, and after making a return to the NSW team after an absence of five years, he toured New Zealand with the national side. It was in this context he earned selection in the inaugural State of Origin match in July. Anderson capped a stellar season by scoring a try in Canterbury’s 19–4 win over Easts in the grand final – the club’s first premiership in 38 years.
In 1982, Anderson again took his place for NSW in the first State of Origin series. After NSW’s 20–16 win in the opening match in Brisbane, the veteran winger was ruled out of the remainder of the series (which was won by the Maroons) before being selected for that year’s Kangaroo Tour of Great Britain and France.
Anderson’s greatest claim to Origin fame was becoming the first Blues player to score three tries in a match (that record has been matched several times but not bettered in the 40 years since). Unfortunately, Anderson’s hat-trick came in the Blues’ 43–22 loss in the deciding match of the 1983 series in what was his final representative appearance.
Having assumed the club captaincy in 1983, Anderson had played a record 232 first-grade games for the Bulldogs when, in 1984, new coach Warren Ryan dropped him to reserve grade. Under Ryan, it was a new regime for the club who’d been ‘The Entertainers’ under previous coach Ted Glossop. Now, defence was king. Canterbury would win the premiership that year but by grand-final time, Anderson had already relocated to English club football with Hull Kingston Rovers.
Taking on captain-coach duties at Halifax for the 1984–85 season, Anderson lured former Manly fullback Graham Eadie out of retirement and turned the flailing club around. In 1987, Anderson’s charges defeated St Helens 19–18 in the Challenge Cup final. He then took on a lower-grade coaching role with the Bulldogs in 1989 before controversially taking over from Phil Gould the following year. Gould had taken the Bulldogs to premiership success in 1988, but Anderson’s appointment was seen as undermining the under-pressure coach.
Anderson, the 1993 Dally M Coach of the Year, formed a great partnership with club captain Terry Lamb, with the Bulldogs beating hot favourites Manly in the 1995 grand final. It followed a stunning form reversal that year after Anderson dropped four star players for reneging on their Super League contracts.
Named foundation coach of the Melbourne Storm for the 1998 NRL season, Anderson guided the club to victory over St George Illawarra in the 1999 grand final after making the difficult decision to drop his son, five-eighth Ben Anderson, when the club went through a rough patch. Storm players of that era credit Anderson with bringing a family ethos to the young club. His singlemindedness in preparing the Kangaroos for the 2000 World Cup and the 2001 Ashes tour, however, saw him fall out with Melbourne powerbrokers and he shifted to Cronulla.
Anderson’s time at the Sharks was just as divisive – he dropped crowd favourite Preston Campbell (and several others) and took on club officials by continuing to coach Australia. While watching the vital Third Test of the 2003 Ashes series at Wigan – a match in which he selected former Bulldogs player Darren Smith from outside the squad – Anderson suffered a heart attack and was rushed to hospital. After spending six weeks convalescing in England, he was promptly sacked by Sharks management on his return.
Anderson seemed a poor fit as Roosters coach in 2007 and lasted just half a season before standing down because of ill health. His return to the Bulldogs as a member of the football club board – wife Lynne was chairwoman – was equally disastrous before he resigned in the wake of Phil Gould’s return as general manager.
With a strong kicking game honed from his background in Australian Rules football in Wagga Wagga, Greg Brentnall followed childhood friends the Mortimer brothers to the Bulldogs in 1977. The Riverina boys would win a premiership together with Canterbury, although it took several seasons for the tall, athletic utility back to cement his place in the ‘Entertainers’ team after suffering two broken-arm injuries.
In 1980, Brentnall made his debut for NSW as a centre in a traditional interstate match before touring New Zealand with the national squad and appearing in two Tests. Selected on the wing in the inaugural Origin match, he has the distinction of scoring the first try in Origin history after finishing off a determined passing rush midway through the first half. Queensland led 9–5 by half-time, however, and went on to win 20–10.
‘I often wonder what would have happened if NSW were better prepared for that first match and we actually won the game,’ Brentnall later reflected. ‘What effect that would have had on the Origin concept …’ Origin might never have taken off.
Brentnall finished a memorable season by playing a star role in Canterbury’s grand-final win over Easts (interestingly, he shifted to fullback only after Stan Cutler was injured in the major semi-final). It was Brentnall who put up the towering kick that was fielded by winger Steve Gearin in one of the best tries scored at the SCG.
Brentnall went on to represent NSW again in the 1982 and 1983 Origin series, both won by Queensland, and played 13 Tests for Australia. The 1982 Rothmans Medal winner, Brentnall was fullback in all five Tests on ‘The Invincibles’ Kangaroos Tour that year, as well as in the first-ever Test against Papua New Guinea.
Brentnall retired at the age of 26 to take up a rugby league development role in the Riverina district. In 1998, he joined former Bulldogs teammate Chris Anderson as assistant coach of the Melbourne Storm and was later football development manager and chairman of Victoria Rugby League.
Rugged Wests forward Bob Cooper was called into NSW’s inaugural State of Origin team when former teammate Les Boyd, then playing for Manly, was a late withdrawal. The second rower, who was discovered playing rugby by Magpies coach Roy Masters in 1976, had impressed selectors in back-to-back finals campaigns with the club. Despite the Blues’ 20–10 loss in the historic match, Cooper was very much seen as a future rep star.
Fast forward 18 months and Cooper’s career was in tatters. In June 1982, he was sent off after a vicious brawl in the match against Illawarra at Wollongong Showground. Wests went on to win the match, 23–5, but Cooper was subsequently suspended for a then-record 15 months by the NSWRL judiciary (a record later broken, ironically, by Les Boyd in 1984). But the background to that match is just as interesting as the fallout that followed.
Coooper was out of favour with new Wests coach Terry Fearnley that year and wasn’t even supposed to play against the Steelers after spending the previous month in reserve grade. Returning to the top grade, Cooper wanted to impress his coach with a strong performance but things went wrong from the outset. There was bad blood between the two teams from earlier in the season and when Illawarra prop Greg Cook hit Paul Merlo in an alleged high tackle, Cooper came in to support his teammate with both guns blazing. Cook was knocked out; winger Lee Pomfret had his jaw broken and Cooper was marched from the field.
The great irony was that coach Fearnley was a noted disciplinarian whose teams did not indulge in the rough stuff but the damage, both personally and to the game itself, was immense. When Cooper’s appeal to the NSW Supreme Court over the severity of his suspension was dismissed he opted to play Australian Rules for St George to keep fit during his enforced break. He returned with Norths in 1984 but was forced into retirement after just five games with a dislocated shoulder.
In 2022, the player who, rightly or wrongly, was credited as being the catalyst for the League finally cleaning up the game, passed away after a short battle with cancer, aged 67.
Mick Cronin is regarded as one of the nice guys of rugby league; an exceptional goal kicker, premiership winner and consummate Test player with one of the cleanest records in the toughest era the code has known. It’s ironic, then, that the champion centre is erroneously remembered as the recipient of a punch – one allegedly thrown by then Parramatta teammate Arthur Beetson – that ignited the inaugural Origin match and, more broadly, the Origin concept.
The reality is very different. Midway through the second half, with Queensland holding an 18–5 lead, NSW was desperately trying to get back into the game when Arthur Beetson came in with a swinging left arm that did nothing more than brush Cronin’s chin. But that ‘hit’ signalled a new era of rugby league warfare, of ‘mate versus mate’. If ‘Big Artie’ was willing to belt his good mate ‘The Crow’, the story went, then it was game on!
What the public didn’t know was that, as far as the players were concerned, the contact was nothing to get excited about. Beetson and Cronin even sat beside each other on the return flight to Sydney the following day.
Cronin had waited for years to come to Sydney after representing Country, the Blues and Australia from the NSW South Coast. He believed his game was stagnating in the bush and his rep career was at the crossroads; it was either go to the city or retire. After making the move to Parramatta, with Cronin driving hours to training while continuing to live in his hometown of Gerringong, the Eels made their first grand final only to fall to archrivals Manly, 13–10.
In 1978, Cronin achieved almost everything possible in the game except a premiership title. In that one calendar year, he scored a massive 547 points in 52 matches (including the end-of-year Kangaroo Tour fixtures and all other rep games), including a record 282 premiership points (surpassing Eric Simms’ 1969 record) and a record 26 goals in succession. To cap an amazing year, he was named Rothmans Medal winner for the second season in a row.
Cronin, quietly spoken and gentlemanly in a rough, unrefined era, was at the peak of his career as the 1980s rolled around. He went on to appear in six Origin matches before announcing his retirement from rep football following the 1984 Ashes series. While he never won an Origin series, his career spanned the era between NSW’s dominance in traditional interstate matches in the 1970s and this new Origin platform the Blues couldn’t yet master.
Eels fans revere ‘The Crow’ for his role in the great Parramatta teams that won grand finals in 1981–83 and 1986 – the last Cronin’s final match after returning from a serious eye injury and kicking his team to a 4–2 win. With an ounce of luck, Cronin’s goal-kicking may have brought the Parramatta club a couple of other premierships: his missed attempts in deciders cost the club dearly in 1977 (the 9–all draw with St George) and in 1984 (the 6–4 loss to Canterbury).
As Cronin told me shortly after his retirement: ‘I never worried about kicking goals until I missed a couple that counted.’
After a stint as Eels coach from 1990 to 1993, Cronin retired to Gerringong, where he ran the family hotel business and coached in the local competition . . . unassuming to the end.
Graham Eadie played in just one Origin match, the first. Surprisingly, having stood down from Australia’s midseason tour of New Zealand in 1980, the Manly fullback wasn’t originally selected for the Blues and received the call-up only when injury forced Parramatta’s Garry Dowling to withdraw days before the match.
Originally from Woy Woy on the NSW Central Coast, Eadie was graded as a teenager by Manly in 1971. During the 1970s, he appeared in 22 Tests – including two Kangaroo Tours (1973 and 1978) and two World Cup competitions (1975 and 1977) – as well as in 13 traditional interstate matches.
A popular winner of the 1974 Rothmans Medal, Eadie captured four premierships with the great Sea Eagles teams of that decade (1972–73, 1976 and 1978). He twice won the Clive Churchill Medal as man of the match – in Manly’s 1976 and 1978 grand-final wins over Parramatta and Cronulla respectively.
But by 1980 a line had been drawn through the careers of a host of great players. When Eadie declined to tour New Zealand for business reasons (he’d just opened a gym) he was promptly suspended by the ARL for three weeks. Called into the Blues squad at the eleventh hour, Eadie traded punches with Queensland forward Rod Morris midway through the first half. This was a different type of rugby league warfare.
None of the 15 names in the inaugural NSW State of Origin team went on to play more than a handful of Origin matches – Eadie included. When he retired, somewhat abruptly, after Manly’s loss to Parramatta in the 1983 grand final, he’d scored a NSWRL record 1917 points (71 tries and 847 goals). He was not yet 30 years old.
In 1986, ‘Wombat’ Eadie was coaxed out of retirement by former Kangaroos teammate Chris Anderson to play for English club Halifax. Following Halifax’s win in the 1987 Challenge Cup final, the veteran fullback won the Lance Todd Trophy as player of the match – a fitting final reward for a champion player.
Steve Edge was the hooker in the inaugural Origin match but rarely got his dues at rep time. The St George junior captained the Dragons to premiership success in the historic grand-final draw and replay in 1977.
Shifting to Parramatta after St George’s win in the 1979 grand final, Edge was called into NSW’s Origin team after Test captain George Peponis failed a fitness test. In the opening scrum, the veteran hooker realised this match was being played on another level when his then Parramatta teammate, Arthur Beetson, nailed him with an uppercut.
‘I’m not playing with you now,’ the Queensland captain barked. ‘I’m playing against you.’
Although this proved to be his only Origin appearance, Edge went on to captain Parramatta to three successive grand final wins (1981–83). Retiring after leading the club in their 6–4 loss to Canterbury in the 1984 decider, he later had a long career in club management with the Eels and Dragons.
Unfashionable Souths forward Gary Hambly grabbed his Origin moment when selected in 1980’s inaugural match. The bearded prop, a cousin of former Parramatta international Brian Hambly, had not played in any of the rep games that year and would never wear the blue of NSW again.
The Rabbitohs junior played an indirect role in Origin folklore when Maroons captain Arthur Beetson hit him on the jaw 17 minutes into the second half. From the ensuing penalty, Beetson crunched his Parramatta teammate Mick Cronin in a tackle, which did not draw a penalty. Over the years, fans and commentators alike have often conflated the two incidents.
Hambly left Souths in 1983 and played for English club York to finance a trip to Europe and Alaska. He is proud of his place in Origin history.
Originally from Tamworth, Jim Leis represented Northern Division as a centre before shifting to lock to be closer to the action. In 1980, after fielding offers from Norths, St George and Balmain, the 22-year-old linked with former Tamworth teacher Roy Masters at Wests just as the club was going through a rebuilding phase.
‘I thought I would go down to Sydney and sit on the bench for a while,’ Leis says from his home in Umina on the NSW Central Coast.
But in just his second game with the club, he scored four tries in the Magpies’ 27–24 win over Penrith in Round 2 on his way to winning two Dally M awards – for rookie and lock of the year. Midyear, Leis was selected as a reserve for NSW in the second interstate match, which was used as a trial for Australia’s looming tour of New Zealand. In a match played at Leichhardt Oval in front of just 1200 fans, the Wests lock had minimal game time but was selected as a back-up to Ray Price on Australia’s short tour of New Zealand, where Leis played in minor games but did not appear in a Test.
Leis was then selected in the second row for the inaugural State of Origin match before shifting to lock when Price withdrew from the team.
‘That was the fastest game I ever played in,’ he recalls.
Shoulder, knee and hamstring injuries hampered his time at Wests before he linked with Canterbury in 1983. The following year, Leis achieved another first when he was selected for NSW Country in the inaugural City v. Country Origin match. After a short stint with Cronulla, he finished his career as captain-coach of Macksville in the NSW Group 4 competition (1987–88).
Having recently retired from working in the airline industry, Leis is heavily involved in the Family of League charity and enjoys catching up with former players and old mates.
One of the great ironies of Origin is that Steve Rogers, a Gold Coast junior, played for NSW, while two decades later his son Mat, a Cronulla junior, played for Queensland. Father and son were both born in the Cronulla district before moving north as teenagers, but ended up wearing different-coloured Origin jerseys.
A talented junior five-eighth, Steve Rogers shifted to the centres after being graded by the Gold Coast Tigers in 1972 (for many years Southport Leagues Club had a large photo of Rogers playing for the club hanging over its main bar). The following year, the teenager was back playing with Cronulla after being scouted by ARL official Bob Abbott, and he played in the grand-final loss to Manly as well as for state and country.
In the remainder of the decade, Rogers achieved almost every honour in the game – a Rothmans Medal win in 1975, selection for two World Cups (1975 and 1977) and two Kangaroo Tours (1978 and 1982) – though a grand-final win eluded him. In 1978, he captained the Sharks to an 11–all draw against Manly in the grand final, only to lose the midweek replay 16–0.
As great a player as Rogers was in the 1970s, he wasn’t originally selected in NSW’s 20-man train-on squad in 1980. A recurring neck injury had kept the Cronulla speedster out of rep football leading up to that historic Origin before being selected to partner Mick Cronin, pushing incumbent Test centre Greg Brentnall onto the wing. Cronin and Rogers had played together at rep level throughout the late 1970s.
After captaining Australia in the two-Test series against the visiting France squad in 1981, Rogers led NSW in the second Origin match played. Not that he was enthusiastic about the fixture, which was played only because the Blues had already won the traditional interstate series. ‘I hope it is canned this year,’ Rogers wrote in his column in The Sunday Telegraph before the game. ‘The players have enough representative football this season . . . (and) don’t relish the thought of the match.’
If NSW had won that second Origin, the concept may have died then and there. Ironically, it was Rogers’ illegal tackle on opposing centre Mal Meninga which gifted the Maroons a penalty try and secured their 22-15 victory. He finished the year as the Gold