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The many State of Origin lives of New South Wales halfback Nathan Cleary

The many State of Origin lives of New South Wales halfback Nathan Cleary

As the weather gets colder and the battle between New South Wales and Queensland heats up, you can bet your last dollar Nathan Cleary is set for another run in the State of Origin discourse machine.
If it feels like an annual tradition at this point, that's because it is — and given he started so young, it's hard to think of Cleary as a veteran, even though at just 27, his time served says that's exactly what he is.
His NRL debut was almost 10 seasons ago to the week, which is long enough to see a generation of players come and go. With news coming through on Origin eve that Bryce Cartwright was leaving Parramatta, just eight of the 33 other players who took the field in Cleary's first NRL game are still in the league.
Cleary is level with Latrell Mitchell and Angus Crichton as the state's longest-serving player and level with Crichton and Isaah Yeo as the side's most capped current player.
On Wednesday night, he will draw level with Andrew Johns and Mitchell Pearce with 16 caps at halfback for New South Wales, the most of any player in Blues history.
He has been around long enough at there is little that has not already been said about Nathan Cleary in Origin football and little he has not been.
There were the early years, where he rode shotgun to James Maloney as the junior partner in the halves combination for two series that, given what's happened since, seem like they're from a different player in a different life even if a few old feelings returned for Cleary ahead of Game I, which marked his first Origin match in two years.
"It comes with more expectations now, with the standing in the game and the amount of games I've played," Cleary said.
"But I'm in a position to play my best footy, I had a very simplified role (back then) and contributed where I could. It's the same now, I want to do my role and my best for the team, but it's having a greater influence on what we're able to do.
"Coming back I have a lot more confidence in my own ability and what I'm able to do. But I was definitely still nervous, I felt like the new kid at school and even coming into the game I was quite nervous."
It's hard to see the arc of history when you're in the middle of it, but it's worth remembering how much had changed for Cleary in his two years between Origin appearances.
From the 2023 series opener to the 2025 equivalent, Penrith won two more premierships and Cleary played what might always be the greatest 20 minutes of football in his entire life.
He cannot be the same player, because too much has happened to him, but Cleary's performance at Lang Park fits in well with his middle years of Origin football, which have happened as he was building that legacy with Penrith which is as towering as it is undeniable.
His form for New South Wales from 2020, the year everything changed, is harder to parse because there is enough of everything to twist reality into anything you want it to be.
His exemplary play in the 2021 series, where he helped steer the Blues to two of the most dominant wins in Origin history, is offset by the series losses in 2020 and 2022, which is then complicated given Cleary was a deserving choice for man of the match in each of New South Wales wins in those series, which came by near record margins, and around and around it goes because in Origin more than anywhere else in rugby league, we turn a team game into an individual sport.
Likewise, his efforts in Game I proved a lightning rod. He played a role in each of New South Wales' four tries, straightening the attack particularly well for Brian To'o's try and Zac Lomax's second score and he ran the ball directly and well.
Of all the things to come under the microscope, goalkicking would have been the least likely — Cleary is literally the most accurate kicker in first-grade history — but it did after he went one from four from the tee. He couldn't sleep afterwards thinking about it.
That game, like Cleary's Origin journey as a whole, does not fit neatly into the boxes we make for our interstate heroes. None of them really do, until we retrofit it after the fact to flatten out and simplify their greatness, sanding out the rough edges and fine details so it fits more neatly into our memories.
Johns is the best playmaker the Blues have ever had but he did not start at halfback for all three games of a winning series until eight years after his Origin debut. Peter Sterling has the most man-of-the-match awards of any player in New South Wales history and he only won a single series.
Ricky Stuart, who is currently tied with Cleary for most matches won as a Blues halfback (they're also the only two Blues halfbacks to play more than 10 games and have a winning record), had an Origin career that only lasted five years due to the Super League war.
Laurie Daley and Brett Kenny, who both have a claim to be the best player New South Wales ever had, were only judged best on ground in an Origin game once each.
None of this denigrates their legacies — if anything, it enhances them because it creates a fuller, truer picture and because peaks are made more towering by the valleys from which they rise. Ask for perfection, even from your memories, and you're asking to be let down.
Cleary would never ask to be put in the company of those legends. That would tempt a terrible fate. But by the virtue of his accomplishments, and the fact he could have another five series or more to play if injury permits, means that is what he'll be measured against, for better and for worse.
That's why his part in this side is changing and why, if the Blues can wrap up the series on Wednesday night in Perth, it could mark the beginning of a third and final stage of Cleary's Origin career, one which could have the longest of tails.
A halfback must always be a leader — Cleary was first made vice-captain of the Blues when he was just 22- but that's not the same as being a senior player. He is a young veteran, but a veteran all the same and that changes things. There is less to prove even if there's more to do.
It's a transition Cleary began with Penrith this year and one he's trying to bring to Origin with a slightly different bent. At the Panthers, he is mentoring players who grew up watching him but for New South Wales he is tasked with leading other leaders.
"I've been challenged as a leader (for Penrith), trying to get around younger guys and inexperienced guys to help them get the best out of themselves but also for them to feel confidence and not that they have to fill the jersey of guys like Jarome Luai and James Fisher-Harris," Cleary said.
"As much as the start of the year has been a bit of a challenge I really do believe it's going to benefit me in the future with leadership and the way I play.
"You come in here and you're surrounded by guys who are experienced at NRL level but Origin is a different arena.
"They all bring their own leadership qualities, it's nice to rub shoulders with leaders at other clubs and understand their ideologies and combine to be a greater force."
Cleary's certainty there are still changes to come for his game, things he can learn and improve on and implement at all levels, is striking.
The greatest football careers are never completed — they are abandoned. The best players never feel as though they are fully formed even if they seem it to the outside.
There is no finished product for Cleary, no endpoint on the winding path he started almost ten years ago now.
That thinking has carried him through the ups and downs of Origin for the past seven years and as a new era potentially dawns for him in sky blue it will do the same for some time to come.

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Slater says Maroons won't be dictated to on kick-off
Slater says Maroons won't be dictated to on kick-off

The Advertiser

time6 minutes ago

  • The Advertiser

Slater says Maroons won't be dictated to on kick-off

A defiant Billy Slater has declared Queensland won't be pressured into kicking off to NSW firebrand Spencer Leniu in State of Origin II. As Maroons prop Tino Fa'asuamaleaui said he was not scared of Leniu on Tuesday, Slater would not be drawn on whether the Maroons would kick to the Blues front-rower. Of the four long kick-offs from Queensland in their game one loss, none went to Leniu or Payne Haas, in what has since been labelled by some as a pre-determined plan. The situation left Leniu fuming, with the Sydney Roosters prop appearing to swear in frustration as the Maroons changed the direction of their kick to avoid him. Haas has largely stayed away from the debate over the past week, but on Monday said he would want the ball kicked off to Leniu if he was in the Queensland side, since he'd want the chance to take down a powerful rival. Former NSW front-rower Willie Mason has also accused the Maroons of being "s**t scared" of Leniu, while Braith Anasta labelled Queensland "weak". Slater dodged a question on Tuesday on whether Leniu would have the chance to take a hit-up from a kick-off at Optus Stadium. But the Maroons coach did defend his team's right to prioritise their own tactics over the entertainment factor. "We don't ask Nathan (Cleary) to kick to a specific corner. He does what he wants," Slater said of the Blues halfback. "He gets his game on. So, we'll be getting our game on. "I get all the dilemma about it, but at the end of the day, it's about building a game and a game plan that best suits you. "It's not about what (the media) want or anyone else wants." Asked about the issue, Maroons front-rower Fa'asuamaleaui rejected any suggestion Queensland's pack were scared of Leniu. "I'm not scared of anyone," Fa'asuamaleaui said. "I just want to do my job for Queensland and I'm not going to back down from anyone and that's our whole team. "We're just going to get out there, get our game on and do what we do best and play our game. "(We're) not backing down from anyone." Slater wouldn't say whether Queensland would make late changes to their pack, or if Kurt Mann could start at hooker in place of Harry Grant. The Maroons have won six of eight games when Grant has come off the bench, as opposed to a 0-4 record with him starting. NSW second-rower Angus Crichton had accused Queensland of mind games last week, refusing to believe Jeremiah Nanai and Pat Carrigan weren't starting. Hamiso Tabuai-Fidow has already let slip that he will move to the right wing at Optus Stadium, after playing left centre in the series-opening 18-6 loss in Brisbane. That defeat has piled the pressure on Slater, who has already axed captain Daly Cherry-Evans and replaced him with Tom Dearden in the halves. A defiant Billy Slater has declared Queensland won't be pressured into kicking off to NSW firebrand Spencer Leniu in State of Origin II. As Maroons prop Tino Fa'asuamaleaui said he was not scared of Leniu on Tuesday, Slater would not be drawn on whether the Maroons would kick to the Blues front-rower. Of the four long kick-offs from Queensland in their game one loss, none went to Leniu or Payne Haas, in what has since been labelled by some as a pre-determined plan. The situation left Leniu fuming, with the Sydney Roosters prop appearing to swear in frustration as the Maroons changed the direction of their kick to avoid him. Haas has largely stayed away from the debate over the past week, but on Monday said he would want the ball kicked off to Leniu if he was in the Queensland side, since he'd want the chance to take down a powerful rival. Former NSW front-rower Willie Mason has also accused the Maroons of being "s**t scared" of Leniu, while Braith Anasta labelled Queensland "weak". Slater dodged a question on Tuesday on whether Leniu would have the chance to take a hit-up from a kick-off at Optus Stadium. But the Maroons coach did defend his team's right to prioritise their own tactics over the entertainment factor. "We don't ask Nathan (Cleary) to kick to a specific corner. He does what he wants," Slater said of the Blues halfback. "He gets his game on. So, we'll be getting our game on. "I get all the dilemma about it, but at the end of the day, it's about building a game and a game plan that best suits you. "It's not about what (the media) want or anyone else wants." Asked about the issue, Maroons front-rower Fa'asuamaleaui rejected any suggestion Queensland's pack were scared of Leniu. "I'm not scared of anyone," Fa'asuamaleaui said. "I just want to do my job for Queensland and I'm not going to back down from anyone and that's our whole team. "We're just going to get out there, get our game on and do what we do best and play our game. "(We're) not backing down from anyone." Slater wouldn't say whether Queensland would make late changes to their pack, or if Kurt Mann could start at hooker in place of Harry Grant. The Maroons have won six of eight games when Grant has come off the bench, as opposed to a 0-4 record with him starting. NSW second-rower Angus Crichton had accused Queensland of mind games last week, refusing to believe Jeremiah Nanai and Pat Carrigan weren't starting. Hamiso Tabuai-Fidow has already let slip that he will move to the right wing at Optus Stadium, after playing left centre in the series-opening 18-6 loss in Brisbane. That defeat has piled the pressure on Slater, who has already axed captain Daly Cherry-Evans and replaced him with Tom Dearden in the halves. A defiant Billy Slater has declared Queensland won't be pressured into kicking off to NSW firebrand Spencer Leniu in State of Origin II. As Maroons prop Tino Fa'asuamaleaui said he was not scared of Leniu on Tuesday, Slater would not be drawn on whether the Maroons would kick to the Blues front-rower. Of the four long kick-offs from Queensland in their game one loss, none went to Leniu or Payne Haas, in what has since been labelled by some as a pre-determined plan. The situation left Leniu fuming, with the Sydney Roosters prop appearing to swear in frustration as the Maroons changed the direction of their kick to avoid him. Haas has largely stayed away from the debate over the past week, but on Monday said he would want the ball kicked off to Leniu if he was in the Queensland side, since he'd want the chance to take down a powerful rival. Former NSW front-rower Willie Mason has also accused the Maroons of being "s**t scared" of Leniu, while Braith Anasta labelled Queensland "weak". Slater dodged a question on Tuesday on whether Leniu would have the chance to take a hit-up from a kick-off at Optus Stadium. But the Maroons coach did defend his team's right to prioritise their own tactics over the entertainment factor. "We don't ask Nathan (Cleary) to kick to a specific corner. He does what he wants," Slater said of the Blues halfback. "He gets his game on. So, we'll be getting our game on. "I get all the dilemma about it, but at the end of the day, it's about building a game and a game plan that best suits you. "It's not about what (the media) want or anyone else wants." Asked about the issue, Maroons front-rower Fa'asuamaleaui rejected any suggestion Queensland's pack were scared of Leniu. "I'm not scared of anyone," Fa'asuamaleaui said. "I just want to do my job for Queensland and I'm not going to back down from anyone and that's our whole team. "We're just going to get out there, get our game on and do what we do best and play our game. "(We're) not backing down from anyone." Slater wouldn't say whether Queensland would make late changes to their pack, or if Kurt Mann could start at hooker in place of Harry Grant. The Maroons have won six of eight games when Grant has come off the bench, as opposed to a 0-4 record with him starting. NSW second-rower Angus Crichton had accused Queensland of mind games last week, refusing to believe Jeremiah Nanai and Pat Carrigan weren't starting. Hamiso Tabuai-Fidow has already let slip that he will move to the right wing at Optus Stadium, after playing left centre in the series-opening 18-6 loss in Brisbane. That defeat has piled the pressure on Slater, who has already axed captain Daly Cherry-Evans and replaced him with Tom Dearden in the halves.

Free-to-air AFL and cricket could disappear from parts of SA and NSW
Free-to-air AFL and cricket could disappear from parts of SA and NSW

ABC News

time2 hours ago

  • ABC News

Free-to-air AFL and cricket could disappear from parts of SA and NSW

Regional residents in parts of South Australia and New South Wales could lose access to Seven Network channels on their TVs from next month, after negotiations with WIN Network broke down. WIN announced it would cease broadcasting 7, 7mate, and 7two into the South Australian markets of Mount Gambier, in the south-east, and Loxton in the Riverland, as well as Griffith in New South Wales' Riverina from July 1. It would mean that audiences in those broadcast areas would be unable to watch free-to-air sports, including football and test cricket, except through streaming services. WIN Network said the decision followed Seven West Media's decision not to renew its broadcast agreement. "While we are disappointed with Seven West Media's decision, we respect their right to pursue their commercial strategies," chief executive Andrew Lancaster said. WIN Network said no jobs were expected to be lost, with local operations and staff to remain in Mount Gambier, Berri and Griffith. Potential blow for locals Riverland Adelaide Crows supporter group vice-president Peter Kennedy said he "couldn't believe" the announcement. "Hopefully, something can happen that makes it so it doesn't take place," he said. "It just seems crazy to me." He said, while some members of the club had used streaming services to watch games, older fans would struggle. Mr Kennedy said he knew of people who didn't know what 7plus was or how to use it and others with no wi-fi connections. "It's going to be challenging for them, to say the least," he said. The Mayor of Griffith City Council, Doug Curran, said access to free-to-air sporting games could inspire people to take up the sport, particularly young Australians. "You only have to go to some of our sporting ovals on the weekend and see all the youth and even some of the adults that play sport," he said. "A lot of that is on the back of seeing some of the superstars playing on TV. "This is taking away from that enjoyment, from that ability for our youth to see what they might become in the future." Mr Curran said he was also concerned that paying for a subscription to access sporting games on streaming services like Kayo would put more pressure on family budgets. "It puts more pressure on, and free-to-air seems to continue to let us down moving forward," Mr Curran said. Hopes negotiations continue A spokesperson for Seven said the network was "disappointed" it had not reached an agreement with WIN. "The communities living in the Riverland and Griffith are incredibly important to Seven and, pleasingly, they will continue to have access to all of our content, including the AFL and cricket, via our live and free streaming platform, 7plus," they said. The network says it is happy to continue negotiations with WIN to broadcast into those markets. Mr Kennedy said if an agreement could not be reached, there would be pushback from the community. "I just hope that they have had all the conversations they can and should have, that they've both been reasonable, and they're both trying to find a solution, rather than just shutting it down," he said. Seven West Media recently acquired a number of regional licences from Southern Cross Austereo, including Tasmania, Darwin, Spencer Gulf, Broken Hill, Mt Isa and remote, central and eastern Australia. The Seven spokesperson said the deal was a sign of the network's "ongoing commitment to regional markets", with the acquisition expected to be completed by June 30.

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