Tightening Origin eligibility leaves youngsters feeling maro

AngryEmu

Member
**Tightening Origin eligibility leaves youngsters feeling marooned**

Jarryd Jackson is eight and loves rugby league. He works hard in class, but can't wait for the bell to ring. The playground is his element. There, he can pass like Cameron Smith, tackle like Sam Thaiday, bash and crash like Dave Taylor and can kick the winning field goal like Cooper Cronk.
''I just love the Maroons,'' says Jarryd, taking a swig from his limited edition Johnathan Thurston autographed water bottle. ''All me and my friends want to do is play for them when we grow up.''
But, for Jarryd, this will not be a merry Christmas. The grinches of the ARL Commission have stolen this young boy's dream by declaring he can never play for his beloved Queensland.
The warped logic behind a decision that has broken an eight-year-old's heart? Jarryd, like so many kids, will not be permitted to pull on a maroon jersey merely because he was born, and has lived his entire life, in NSW. It is a ruling that destroys the very notion that underpins State of Origin - Queensland being the ''state'' and everyone else coming to them from an ''origin''.
Advertisement
''We just can't understand it,'' said Jarryd's father Brendan. ''Sure, when I was a kid you might have had to play for the Blues if you were from a place just over the Queensland border, like Albury. But it has been well established that most talented kids from NSW owe their skill to some Queensland link. Do you think Jarryd could play as well as he does if he had not listened to Ricki-Lee Coulter or read the collected speeches of Kevin Rudd? He's Queensland all over.''
Jarryd had met the previous eligibility criteria to play for the Maroons. ''He knows all the words to the Queensland national anthem, including the verse about the giant pineapple and can shell a Moreton Bay bug in less than 20 seconds,'' Brendan said. ''But, apparently, that's not good enough any more. If you're not born with a cane-cutter in one hand a XXXX stubbie in the other, you're not a real Queenslander. Just because you've never been there.''
The draconian new rule has hit Jarryd hard. ''The kid is devastated,'' Brendan said. ''Like every kid from Punchbowl, he's grown up thinking that, one day, he would run out before his adoring fellow Queenslanders at Suncorp Stadium. We were even thinking of going to Brisbane one day, just to see what it's like. Not much point now, is there?''
Brendan is concerned for the emotional wellbeing of the many young boys from south of the Tweed now threatened with the prospect they will have to play for NSW. ''The night after the ruling Jarryd woke up screaming,'' he said. ''He had a nightmare Laurie Daley and Blocker Roach were holding him down and forcing him to put on a Blues jersey. Daley was saying things like, 'Come on, trust me, we can win the series this year'. No kid should be subjected to that.''
Queensland officials have vowed to appeal the decision. ''First NSW get two home games when it's their turn, now this,'' said a Queensland Rugby League spokesman. ''It's just another example of a NSW-dominated commission tying the game up in red tape, when the maroon tape was holding things together nicely.''
Reminded that commission chairman John Grant is a Queenslander, the QRL spokesman replied: ''He's gone native. But unless he changes this decision and restores the God-given right of every child in this country - and a few others - to play for Queensland, the backlash will make Cyclone Larry look like a light breeze through a fruit shop window.''
Bizarrely, the commission has determined State of Origin would now be interpreted as meaning a player must represent the state from which he originates. ''What next?'' said the man from north of the border. ''To bat for England you have to come from Birmingham, not Bloemfontein? This is the type of blatant discrimination that inspires our players to go out there year after year and perform for their state. Or, at least, for our state.''
Meanwhile, Jarryd sits in his bedroom gazing up at the posters of Queensland Origin champions. ''Please Mr Grant,'' he says, fighting back tears. ''I'll do anything to play for Queensland. I've got Google Maps on my iPod. I'll even find out where it is!''
>

http://www.smh.com.au/rugby-league/league-news/tightening-origin-eligibility-leaves-youngsters-feeling-marooned-20121219-2bnbp.html

Well played :roll
 
Maybe one day someone in NSW will be able to wipe away the tears and develop a game plan that might see them beat Queensland so the young kids have something to aspire to?

Doubt It!
 
As we speak gangs of Queenslanders are forming ready to kidnap promising 12 year olds away to the Sunshine State
 
@Yossarian said:
As we speak gangs of Queenslanders are forming ready to kidnap promising 12 year olds away to the Sunshine State

Funny you should say that, I heard on the news this morning someone in NZ complaining that primary school children would now be targeted and brought over to OZ for origin.

Bit of an over exaggeration if you ask me.
 
NZ are just as bad… They have no right to whine about this matter. For years they have drained the Pacific Islands, Australian Born Islander and players who had a budgie born in NZ.

The ARLC has set a pretty good standard here which I support. Now its time for NZRL to do the same thing and start investing into RL within their own borders, instead of riding the curtails of the NRL!
 
Once they stop losing guys who left NZ at 16 to SOO sides they'll have less need to recruit players with dodgy qualifications.
 
@DavidDuncan said:
@Yossarian said:
As we speak gangs of Queenslanders are forming ready to kidnap promising 12 year olds away to the Sunshine State

Funny you should say that, I heard on the news this morning someone in NZ complaining that primary school children would now be targeted and brought over to OZ for origin.

Bit of an over exaggeration if you ask me.

I agree. In any case there are plenty of 12 year olds who look like superstars and go nowhere. Conversely there are guys who hit their straps in their late teens.
 
http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/sport/nrl/origin-eligibility-rule-changes-will-make-maroons-stronger-says-selector/story-e6frexnr-1226540727694

**State of Origin eligibility rule changes will make Maroons stronger, says selector**

The Courier-Mail
December 20, 2012 12:00AM
\
\
THANK you, ARL Commission, you have just made the Maroons Origin team even stronger.

New Zealand kids who move to Queensland at age 13 or later will be omitted from the state's junior rep teams regardless of talent, ensuring development time and costs are spent on true Queenslanders.

And Queensland chairman of selectors Des Morris yesterday welcomed the new eligibility laws, predicting they would eventually provide a deeper Maroons player pool.

Morris said the laws would have a big impact on junior rep teams.

In the past, Queensland simply selected the best talent in the state for under-age squads.

That meant the Maroons lost players they spent considerable time developing, such as North Queensland forward Jason Taumalolo, Broncos fullback Josh Hoffman and St George Illawarra fullback Gerard Beale.

All three now represent the Kiwis despite having played for Queensland and Australian rep teams while growing up.

Morris said it was likely that from next year Kiwi-raised kids would not be picked in those under-age teams.

"That will mean an Australian kid gets a chance to be developed further," he said.

"It will add to our depth though because we will be putting development money into more Queensland players.

"I'm sure in time we will get it sorted."

One Queensland Origin hopeful left "stateless" by the policy is Northern Territory product Joseph Forrester, named in the Junior Queensland Emerging Squad last Friday, and touted for big things after recently signing for the Broncos.

NT talent Chris Smith was 18th man for the NSW under-18 earlier this year after impressing in the Toyota Cup with Penrith.

NT Rugby League academy coach Duncan Macgillivray, a former Penrith and South Sydney first grader, said it was sad such young players were barred from playing Origin.

"They haven't thought about the affiliated states," he said.
 
@happy tiger said:
Gives us your thoughts Lozza ??

Aaaahhhh…..saving a try is as good as scoring one?? (or insert one of thousands of other Daley-isms) :slight_smile:

I feel sorry for the NSW boys having to listen to his dribbling, the poor bastards' heads will be spinning.
 
@Fade To Black said:
@happy tiger said:
Gives us your thoughts Lozza ??

Aaaahhhh…..saving a try is as good as scoring one?? (or insert one of thousands of other Daley-isms) :slight_smile:

I feel sorry for the NSW boys having to listen to his dribbling, the poor bastards' heads will be spinning.

Have always wondered whether people take the mickey out of Lozza with his nose Like everytime he turns around screaming saying "He gonna knock the stadium over with his nose "

Actually their used to be a cricketer with a big snoz who used to play along with them

Was it Lenny Pascoe ???? Didn't he used to act like he was going to turn around and then stop ,just before and the whole crowd would be screaming :laughing:
 
Back
Top