Maroons Heartbreak As Blues Rip Origin I Away In Stunning Sydney Comeback

State of Origin Game I

MATCH REPORT

Published 27-May-2026



Devastating for the Maroons at Accor Stadium in Origin I.

Kalyn Ponga’s sending off in a decision that immediately sparked controversy proved an enormous turning point. Andrew Johns was critical of the decision during commentary. It swung hard-fought momentum against Queensland, and the Blues produced an extraordinary final-minute play, with James Tedesco catching, juggling and grounding Nathan Cleary’s bomb.

For much of the night, Queensland looked in control.

Not just ahead on the scoreboard — in control of the contest itself. Their line speed was sharp, their middle forwards were winning collisions, Harry Grant was asking questions around the ruck, and Sam Walker, on debut in the most pressurised arena the game can offer, looked remarkably composed.

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Then Origin did what Origin does.

It twisted.

A night that had looked set to become a major statement for Billy Slater instead became a brutal lesson in how quickly interstate football can turn when momentum shifts and belief takes hold.

Queensland led 20-0 after 20 minutes. They were still 20-6 ahead deep into the second half. And yet somehow, they walked away beaten 22-20.

That is the sort of loss that lingers.

Queensland Landed Every Early Blow

If there were doubts about Ponga getting the nod over Reece Walsh, or whether Walker was ready for this level, Queensland answered them quickly.

Robert Toia struck first in the ninth minute after early pressure forced the Blues into errors, and Walker converted.

It got worse for New South Wales from there.

Thomas Flegler, all aggression and direct running, punched through in the 14th minute after Queensland had started owning the middle. Selwyn Cobbo had already done damage with a strong carry in the lead-up, and the Blues suddenly looked rattled.

A few minutes later, Hamiso Tabuai-Fidow crossed as Queensland continued to punish sloppy New South Wales football.

Walker never missed.

By the time he added a penalty goal in the 20th minute, the Maroons were 20-0 up, and Accor Stadium had gone from loud to uneasy.

Queensland weren’t just scoring. They were dictating the terms.

Munster was playing direct. Grant was probing. Tino Fa’asuamaleaui and Flegler were bending the line. Even defensively, the Maroons looked connected and aggressive.

At that point, it genuinely felt like the Blues were in serious trouble.

New South Wales Hang Around

Origin, though, rarely gives you a clean night.

Hudson Young’s try in the 27th minute finally gave the Blues something tangible to work with, trimming the margin to 20-6 after Cleary’s conversion.

Even then, Queensland still looked the more settled side.

They defended repeat pressure well enough and took that lead into half-time without looking especially rattled. But if you were watching closely, there were hints the game was changing shape.

The Blues had started to spend more time in Queensland territory. Their attack still lacked polish, but the game had become less comfortable than the scoreboard suggested.

And once that happens in Origin, strange things tend to follow.

The Turning Point That Changed Everything

The defining moment came just before the hour mark.

Ponga was sent off for a shoulder charge in a decision that immediately lit up debate.

Whether you agreed with it or not, the practical effect was obvious. Queensland suddenly had to survive a critical passage under enormous pressure, a man short, against a side that had finally found some rhythm.

The Blues took advantage.

Ethan Strange crossed in the 62nd minute after Stephen Crichton’s break opened the Maroons up, although Cleary’s missed conversion meant Queensland still had breathing room at 20-10.

But the feel of the match had changed completely.

The crowd sensed it. The Blues sensed it. Queensland, perhaps, sensed it too.

Cleary’s 40/20 in the 70th minute was the moment the pressure became suffocating. It was a champion’s play, the kind that flips field position and emotional momentum in one strike.

Seconds later, he backed it up by slicing through himself.

20-16.

Now the Maroons were no longer managing a lead. They were trying to survive.

Queensland Let The Game Slip

The temptation will be to make this all about the Ponga send-off.

It was enormous. Lose a player in Origin, against a side with Nathan Cleary pulling the strings, and the pressure changes instantly.

But Queensland still had chances to steady themselves.

Instead, just when composure mattered most, the mistakes crept in.

Robert Toia lost the ball. Harry Grant conceded a costly penalty. Selwyn Cobbo came up with an error. Jojo Fifita spilled possession.

None of those moments, on their own, decide a match.

Together, though, they handed New South Wales exactly what it needed — territory, repeat sets, and belief.

That’s how these games can turn. Not always in one dramatic flash, but in small moments where control slips away and suddenly the team chasing starts to smell something.

By the time Cleary launched that final bomb, Queensland no longer looked like a side closing out a win. They looked like a side trying desperately to survive.

And when Tedesco somehow came down with it — juggling, regathering, grounding — it felt like the kind of moment Origin keeps in its vault for years.

Queensland will argue the turning point. They’ll replay the send-off. They’ll point to what might have been.

But the harder truth is this: they had this game.

And they let it get away.


Published 26-May-2026


Origin Opener Set For Sydney Showdown As New-Look Maroons Eye Early Blow

The first round of Origin is here.

For 2026, State of Origin starts at Accor Stadium in Sydney, before heading to the MCG for Game II and Suncorp Stadium for the decider.

The 2026 State of Origin series is the 45th edition of the men’s interstate best-of-three rivalry, with Queensland entering the campaign holding the historical edge — 25 series wins to New South Wales’ 17, with two series drawn.

For the Maroons, Kalyn Ponga has been selected over Reece Walsh by Billy Slater, while Sam Walker makes his Origin debut in place of the injured Tom Dearden. Max Plath debuts, with Jojo Fifita and Briton Nikora earning their first Maroons selections.

For the Blues, James Tedesco keeps Dylan Edwards out at fullback, while Laurie Daly has opted for Tolutau Koula out of position on the wing ahead of Zac Lomax and Jacob Kiraz. Injury to Mitchell Moses means Ethan Strange will start, while Addin Fonua-Blake finally gets his Origin debut.

The Maroons have won only two of their past 10 Origin games in Sydney, although one of those victories came last year.

Can Queensland pressure Strange enough to cut off quality ball to Nathan Cleary?

New South Wales appears to hold the upper hand through the middle, but Pat Carrigan and Tino Fa’asuamaleaui will relish that challenge.

Cleary versus Walker. Strange versus Munster.

Can Harry Grant put the Maroons on the front foot with his creativity around the ruck?

Can Max Plath and Hamiso Tabuai-Fidow reproduce their Dolphin’s NRL form on the Origin stage?

This shapes as a classic Origin arm wrestle, with Queensland having won six of the past 10 series.

The game will be broadcast live on 9Now, with kick-off at 8.05pm.

New South Wales Blues

  1. James Tedesco
  2. Brian To’o
  3. Stephen Crichton
  4. Kotoni Staggs
  5. Tolutau Koula
  6. Ethan Strange
  7. Nathan Cleary
  8. Addin Fonua-Blake
  9. Reece Robson
  10. Mitch Barnett
  11. Hudson Young
  12. Haumole Olakau’atu
  13. Isaah Yeo

Interchange

  1. Cameron Murray
  2. Victor Radley
  3. Jacob Saifiti
  4. Blayke Brailey

Extended squad

  1. Casey McLean
  2. Dylan Lucas
  3. Matt Burton

Coach

Laurie Daley


Queensland Maroons

  1. Kalyn Ponga
  2. Selwyn Cobbo
  3. Robert Toia
  4. Hamiso Tabuai-Fidow
  5. Jojo Fifita
  6. Cameron Munster
  7. Sam Walker
  8. Tom Flegler
  9. Harry Grant
  10. Tino Fa’asuamaleaui
  11. Reuben Cotter
  12. Kurt Capewell
  13. Max Plath

Interchange

  1. Briton Nikora
  2. Lindsay Collins
  3. Patrick Carrigan
  4. Trent Loiero

Extended squad

  1. Ezra Mam
  2. Gehamat Shibasaki
  3. Kulikefu Finefeuiaki

Coach

Billy Slater

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