No matter what happens in his Origin debut, history beckons for rookie maroon Robert Toia
With just 10 NRL games under his belt as he prepares for his Maroon debut on Wednesday night, you have to dig deep into the annals of Origin history to find anything like the 20-year old Rooster.
Since the Broncos entered the NSWRL in 1988 and Queensland no longer selected players straight from the Brisbane premiership, only two players have made their first grade and Origin debuts in the same year.
Both of them — Willie Carne in 1990 (six games) and Ben Ikin in 1995 (four games) — came off the bench when they became the two-least experienced Origin players of all time. It was the same for New South Wales forward Payne Haas in 2019 (10 games) when he set the NRL-era record.
When Toia hits the Lang Park turf he will break Jim Leis's record as the least-experienced starting player in Origin history.
It's currently shared by Trent Barrett, who debuted at five-eighth for the Blues in the third game of the 1997 series when there were no Super League players selected, and Jim Leis, who played lock for New South Wales in the first ever Origin match back in 1980.
It's a measure of how dramatic Toia's ascension really is that we must look to split competitions and the very dawn of these times for anything similar.
An Origin debut under those circumstances would take something exceptional no matter what, let alone with Toia likely being asked to handle Latrell Mitchell and the rest of the New South Wales left edge.
According to Brent Tate, who currently shares the record for fewest matches before a Queensland debut in the NRL era — another record Toia will break in Origin I — the challenge shouldn't intimidate the young Rooster but inspire him.
"I heard Billy (Slater) say during the week that Queensland chooses you and that's a great analogy," Tate said.
"He's in the team for a reason. Billy and the state believe in him and he's got a huge task, marking Latrell, but it's not something he should be worried or afraid of — he should be up for the challenge in his own mind, 'how is Latrell going to contain me?'
"That's the aggressive mindset you have to play with, you have to play tough.
"Enjoy every minute of it but know that when Wednesday comes around you have to be big, you have to be aggressive, you have to play your best game of footy."
Tate had played just 14 NRL matches when he was picked for the 2002 decider, playing the final 25 minutes at centre as Queensland secured a draw to retain the shield.
He says now that he was too young to truly grasp what was happening, which means he was too young to be afraid and, like Toia, initially thought the call telling him he'd be a maroon was a gee up from a teammate.
"If you've ever been in a footy club you know it's a tough school, you wouldn't put it past the boys doing that. But when you've played a handful of games it can be surreal, so you do wonder. It's a call you never forget," Tate said.
"My whole first week was all about excitement, I wasn't nervous at all. It wasn't until I ran out there that I realised the enormity of it all and it was an out-of-body experience.
"I took my position and looked down to see I was wearing the maroon kit, I looked up and saw the blue jerseys and that's when it hit me — holy shit, I'm playing State of Origin football.
"It happens so fast you're almost too naïve to understand the enormity of it. You ride the wave of emotion and enjoy every second of it, that's how it was for me."
To some, Toia has seemed like an Origin prospect for some time, even accounting for this very early start.
Roosters teammate Connor Watson, who will come off the bench for New South Wales on Wednesday, remembers when Toia first showed up at the Tricolours as a 17-year old to train with the top squad.
"He was setting up and scoring tries against the first-grade squad, so straight away you could tell he was going to be a freak," Watson said.
"He probably didn't think getting picked in Origin would happen this quickly for him but you could always see the talent, he always felt like he would be an Origin player.
"To do it after 10 games, it shows how special a talent he is."
Toia's 10 games with the Roosters have been impressive while also being sprinkled with moments of inexperience you'd expect from any player just beginning his time in first grade.
Two weeks ago, Toia scored a powerful double against the Dolphins at Magic Round and set a new season high for run metres. It showed the best of him — his speed, his power and his strength.
In his next game, he dropped the ball while trying to put it down against Canterbury without a defender in sight. Which showed that he is still young, still learning, still finding his way. Teething problems take time to pass.
Consistency at the top level is a skill that can only be learned through experience and even for his age Toia hasn't had the same time to do it as most.
A series of knee injuries and a broken jaw mean he had played just 12 games in the past two seasons before 2025. Even so, he's played more NSW Cup games than he has NRL games.
It might have cost Toia valuable time to settle into the NRL ahead of what will be the biggest night of his life, but Watson — no stranger to injury himself — believes it's given Toia a greater maturity and perspective.
"You don't take things for granted as much. That was part of my mentality of enjoying the experience because when you're away from the game it can really test your love for the game," Watson said.
"You have time to reflect, and Rob's had those two ACL's, so when he's come back he's really enjoyed his training. He's been really diligent.
"That's really come through in the thing that's impressed me so much this year, which is his attitude and mentality in defence.
"He's put that first and he's wanted to do a good job defensively and he has done that."
That defensive aptitude will be put to the ultimate test on Wednesday night. Mitchell and the rest of the NSW left edge would feature heavily in Laurie Daley's game plan regardless of who was opposite them, but given Toia's inexperience he will no doubt be targeted.
Even if there are many more Queensland nights to come, this might be the greatest challenge he ever faces.
Never again will he be asked to confront such an unknown and nobody in the history of State of Origin football has been asked to do such a big job with such little experience.
If things backfire it might be as a footnote, a factoid for the trainspotters to pull out at a trivia night — the rookie who got cast into the Origin fires with so few NRL appearances you can count them on your fingers.
But it could also be as the newest piece of the story Queensland tells itself over and over, the one that starts with an unheralded maroon becoming more than he ever thought he could be when his state needed him.
Ten games is not a long time to learn how to be a hero, but 80 minutes of Origin football can be enough to become one.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

News.com.au
an hour ago
- News.com.au
AFLW stars on being role models, dealing with setbacks and the future of the league: ‘The game has evolved'
Posing on set for Stellar's shoot in Sydney's eastern suburbs is worlds away from the footy field, yet Chloe Molloy – co-captain of Sydney Swans' AFLW team – embraces being out of her comfort zone. 'I can respect what models do,' Molloy tells Stellar with a laugh. 'I get so awkward – I'm not camera shy but then … I am slightly camera shy.' Molloy, who grew up in the Victorian town of Whittlesea, made her AFLW debut in 2017 – and won the AFLW Rising Star Award, was named All-Australian three times, and nabbed a Best and Fairest at her former club Collingwood, before signing with the Swans in 2023. Ahead of the start of the 2025 AFLW season – marking the league's tenth overall (two seasons were played in 2022) – Molloy and her cohorts, Brisbane Lions dual premiership player Ally Anderson and Melbourne captain Kate Hore – reflect on how the league has changed since its inception in 2017. 'The game has evolved a lot,' Molloy says. As for what she would like to see in its future? 'I'd love for there to be more analysis [of matches]. I'd love more camera angles [during broadcasts]. I think you can get caught up with what we don't have … and forget how far we have come.' The trio is hopeful that, like them, more AFLW players will be able to earn a full-time salary from playing in the coming years – an ambition shared by the AFL. '[The AFL] is committed to us being full-time,' Molloy notes. 'When that is, hopefully sooner rather than later. There's growth in the game that's happening and still needs to happen. Salaries not only for the players but salaries around [for support staff]. Hopefully in the next few years [there will be] full time wages not just for the players, but for everyone around us.' Molloy, 26, is on track to make her return to the Swans after an Anterior Cruciate Ligament (ACL) injury ruled her out of last season. 'It was very hard to process that I had even done it,' Molloy says. 'And you just know straight away that you are on the sidelines for so long. I didn't realise how mentally taxing it would be: 10, 11 months. One that I wouldn't wish upon anybody. It is a rehab beast – at times, it definitely defeated me. Now, I look ahead and everything that I have been through. It kind of makes me think, I just want to play football. I don't have a return date set. Fingers crossed [for a round one return].' Brisbane Lions midfielder Anderson, who played in two premierships with the club and is a three-time AFLW All-Australian, is firmly focused on avenging the Lions crushing Grand Final loss to North Melbourne last season. 'It was super devastating and a bit emotional,' Brisbane-born Anderson – a proud Gangulu / Wakka Wakka woman – tells Stellar. 'And it wasn't the first Grand Final that we'd lost,' the 31-year-old adds. 'I have been on both sides and it never gets any easier. You sort of have a really big break in the off-season away from footy. 'As a team, we have worked together. The position we have put ourselves in throughout the whole pre-season to … get back to what we were and do one better. 'We all want to redeem ourselves.' Like Molloy, Anderson made her AFLW debut in 2017 and she adds: 'I've played every game since'. The winner of the 2022 AFL Women's best and fairest award, Anderson notes: 'I'm one of the lucky ones – for the past 3-4 years, I've been able to dedicate myself to footy. I've been able to work on my fitness and I have had a lot of improvement over the past few years. I never thought I'd be a full-time professional athlete.' Ahead of the new season, Hore says she is more aware than ever about being a role model to the next generation 'It definitely took me a bit of time for it to sink in,' the 30-year-old says. 'My idols in footy growing up were all male, so for young girls to now have AFLW athletes to look up to is pretty cool. 'The saying 'you can't be what you can't see' resonates with me.' Hore, a three-time All-Australian player, Best & Fairest winner, and the league's leading goalkicker in 2023, is in a relationship with Corey Maynard, a former footballer who now works in player development at North Melbourne – and the couple share their Melbourne home with a Golden Retriever puppy, Benny. 'Footy is obviously a big part of our lives but we love getting out of the footy bubble whenever we can,' Hore says. 'We are both very competitive, so when either of our teams lose we're probably not much fun to be around. He's incredibly supportive of my footy career.' The 2025 NAB AFLW Premiership season starts on Thursday, August 14. See

News.com.au
8 hours ago
- News.com.au
Broncos hit with injuries, Ezra Mam report in belting of the hapless Rabbitohs
The Broncos thrashed the Rabbitohs 60-14 on the back of a Reece Walsh masterclass for their highest score in 14 years, but Xavier Willison suffered a broken arm at Suncorp Stadium. Payne Haas was also ruled out pre-match due to an infection, while Ezra Mam was placed on report to tarnish an otherwise stellar night for the home side. Walsh had four try assists and a try, while Kotoni Staggs, Deine Mariner and Ezra Mam grabbed doubles in the 10 tries to two rout. Staggs put Selwyn Cobbo through a hole before he found Mam who passed back and forth to Walsh to race away and score and give the Broncos the lead. Mam was placed on report for high contact on Souths fullback Jye Gray. Adam Reynolds put the ball on a dime for Jack Gosiewski to dive on a grubber to score the Broncos' second. Lewis Dodd put up a pinpoint cross-field kick for Bayleigh Bentley-Hape to produce a brilliant catch to score and get Souths on the board. Walsh put Staggs through a hole as the Broncos scored a dagger just before the break. However Tallis Duncan charged over on the stroke of half-time, but Souths' second missed goal of the night made it 18-8 at the interval. A costly error from Jacob Host allowed Cobbo to pounce and race away to score a 50-metre try against the run of play. In a big blow for the Broncos prop Willison suffered a suspected broken forearm. Walsh produced some magic quick hands to put Mariner over for another try as the Broncos looked to run away with it. Ben Talty charged over from close range off a pass from Billy Walters as the Broncos threatened a cricket score. Mariner finished off a slick Broncos raid to dive over in the corner for his second as the Broncos extended their lead. Mariner turned provider to put Staggs over for his double as the Broncos pushed towards a half century. Mam sliced through a gaping hole to score a double of his own as the Broncos passed 50. Lachlan Hubner scored a consolation try for Souths after Ashton Ward saved a try at the other end with a try-saving tackle on Jordan Riki. Patrick Carrigan put Walsh over for a late try to cap a big win for the Broncos in style on another sad night for the Rabbitohs. Walsh came bounced back from one of his worst performances of the season to produce one of his best in the thrashing of the Rabbitohs. Walsh's run metres were down with just 63 from eight runs, but everything he touched turned to gold in a masterclass display. Walsh finished with four tackle busts, an offload, two linebreaks, four linebreak assists and four try assists to go with the final try of the night. Mam was also brilliant with 209 run metres, four tackle busts, two linebreaks and a classy double in a superb display. With Walsh and Mam in their team and firing the Broncos will be very hard to beat in the finals and they could push into the top four after improving their points differential and the Warriors lost. But Haas had to go to hospital and be put on an IV drip due to a skin infection, while Willison's injury is another headache for Michael Maguire.


The Advertiser
9 hours ago
- The Advertiser
Dolphins overcome loss of star centre to take thriller
A high-risk, high-reward play has paid off for the Dolphins, who have given their NRL finals hopes a major boost with a last-ditch 20-18 win over the Warriors. The Dolphins looked down and out at Auckland's Go Media Stadium in their Friday night clash, trailing 18-16 with just over two minutes remaining and down a man. But they earned a penalty 35 metres out and opted against going for a score-levelling kick, instead chasing a match-winning try. It paid off, scoring on the final tackle, with Jeremy Marshall-King sending a long ball out for winger Jamayne Isaako to break the hearts of the Warriors. Daring Dolphins skipper Isaiya Katoa said he believed they had to attack to roll the dice. "I thought we were attacking really well, we just needed to give ourselves an opportunity to go down there and play some footy," the halfback said. "I was definitely confident that we were playing good enough and I was confident in the attack and being able to score a try to win the game." Starting round 22 in eighth spot and chasing a maiden finals berth, it helps the Dolphins keep Manly and the Sydney Roosters at bay. The win was all the more remarkable with strike centre Herbie Farnworth assisted from the field with a hamstring injury. The England international, who has been the Dolphins' most consistent performer in 2025, opened the scoring in the fourth minute, crossing for his 12th try of season. But tragedy struck soon after when the 25-year-old made a break and was charging downfield, only to crash to the turf clutching at his hamstring. Initial reports from the Dolphins were that Farnworth was looking at four to six weeks on the sidelines, with scans booked back in Brisbane. The Dolphins had only got playmaker Kodi Nikorima back for the clash with the fourth-placed Warriors after five weeks on the sidelines with his own hamstring injury. Despite missing key trio Chanel Harris-Tavita, James Fisher-Harris and Wayde Egan, the Warriors looked like they had bounced back to form after their shock loss to battling Gold Coast. Hard-running winger Dallin Watene-Zelezniak crossed twice in the first half although the Warriors trailed 16-12 at halftime, with Marshall-King and Oryn Keeley also getting on the board for the visitors. The home side took the lead in the 60th minute when second-rower Leka Halasima leapt high to take a Tanah Boyd bomb and dived across the line for a converted try. Nikorima blew a chance to take the lead with seven minutes remaining when he knocked on an Katoa grubber in the in-goal. The visitors then lost veteran forward Felise Kaufusi to the sin bin for a dangerous tackle, taking out the legs of Jacob Laban. But Watene-Zelezniak's penalty for a high tackle on Max Fegai gave them another sniff and Isaako, who normally would have taken the penalty goal, still delivered. Warriors coach Andrew Webster said his side wasn't going to "kick stones" over the defeat. "There's so many good signs but it's hard to take obviously because it's such a dramatic finish," he said. "No-one is going to lie, you get your hopes up ... and then it gets taken away from you and that's hard, but we've got to move on." A high-risk, high-reward play has paid off for the Dolphins, who have given their NRL finals hopes a major boost with a last-ditch 20-18 win over the Warriors. The Dolphins looked down and out at Auckland's Go Media Stadium in their Friday night clash, trailing 18-16 with just over two minutes remaining and down a man. But they earned a penalty 35 metres out and opted against going for a score-levelling kick, instead chasing a match-winning try. It paid off, scoring on the final tackle, with Jeremy Marshall-King sending a long ball out for winger Jamayne Isaako to break the hearts of the Warriors. Daring Dolphins skipper Isaiya Katoa said he believed they had to attack to roll the dice. "I thought we were attacking really well, we just needed to give ourselves an opportunity to go down there and play some footy," the halfback said. "I was definitely confident that we were playing good enough and I was confident in the attack and being able to score a try to win the game." Starting round 22 in eighth spot and chasing a maiden finals berth, it helps the Dolphins keep Manly and the Sydney Roosters at bay. The win was all the more remarkable with strike centre Herbie Farnworth assisted from the field with a hamstring injury. The England international, who has been the Dolphins' most consistent performer in 2025, opened the scoring in the fourth minute, crossing for his 12th try of season. But tragedy struck soon after when the 25-year-old made a break and was charging downfield, only to crash to the turf clutching at his hamstring. Initial reports from the Dolphins were that Farnworth was looking at four to six weeks on the sidelines, with scans booked back in Brisbane. The Dolphins had only got playmaker Kodi Nikorima back for the clash with the fourth-placed Warriors after five weeks on the sidelines with his own hamstring injury. Despite missing key trio Chanel Harris-Tavita, James Fisher-Harris and Wayde Egan, the Warriors looked like they had bounced back to form after their shock loss to battling Gold Coast. Hard-running winger Dallin Watene-Zelezniak crossed twice in the first half although the Warriors trailed 16-12 at halftime, with Marshall-King and Oryn Keeley also getting on the board for the visitors. The home side took the lead in the 60th minute when second-rower Leka Halasima leapt high to take a Tanah Boyd bomb and dived across the line for a converted try. Nikorima blew a chance to take the lead with seven minutes remaining when he knocked on an Katoa grubber in the in-goal. The visitors then lost veteran forward Felise Kaufusi to the sin bin for a dangerous tackle, taking out the legs of Jacob Laban. But Watene-Zelezniak's penalty for a high tackle on Max Fegai gave them another sniff and Isaako, who normally would have taken the penalty goal, still delivered. Warriors coach Andrew Webster said his side wasn't going to "kick stones" over the defeat. "There's so many good signs but it's hard to take obviously because it's such a dramatic finish," he said. "No-one is going to lie, you get your hopes up ... and then it gets taken away from you and that's hard, but we've got to move on." A high-risk, high-reward play has paid off for the Dolphins, who have given their NRL finals hopes a major boost with a last-ditch 20-18 win over the Warriors. The Dolphins looked down and out at Auckland's Go Media Stadium in their Friday night clash, trailing 18-16 with just over two minutes remaining and down a man. But they earned a penalty 35 metres out and opted against going for a score-levelling kick, instead chasing a match-winning try. It paid off, scoring on the final tackle, with Jeremy Marshall-King sending a long ball out for winger Jamayne Isaako to break the hearts of the Warriors. Daring Dolphins skipper Isaiya Katoa said he believed they had to attack to roll the dice. "I thought we were attacking really well, we just needed to give ourselves an opportunity to go down there and play some footy," the halfback said. "I was definitely confident that we were playing good enough and I was confident in the attack and being able to score a try to win the game." Starting round 22 in eighth spot and chasing a maiden finals berth, it helps the Dolphins keep Manly and the Sydney Roosters at bay. The win was all the more remarkable with strike centre Herbie Farnworth assisted from the field with a hamstring injury. The England international, who has been the Dolphins' most consistent performer in 2025, opened the scoring in the fourth minute, crossing for his 12th try of season. But tragedy struck soon after when the 25-year-old made a break and was charging downfield, only to crash to the turf clutching at his hamstring. Initial reports from the Dolphins were that Farnworth was looking at four to six weeks on the sidelines, with scans booked back in Brisbane. The Dolphins had only got playmaker Kodi Nikorima back for the clash with the fourth-placed Warriors after five weeks on the sidelines with his own hamstring injury. Despite missing key trio Chanel Harris-Tavita, James Fisher-Harris and Wayde Egan, the Warriors looked like they had bounced back to form after their shock loss to battling Gold Coast. Hard-running winger Dallin Watene-Zelezniak crossed twice in the first half although the Warriors trailed 16-12 at halftime, with Marshall-King and Oryn Keeley also getting on the board for the visitors. The home side took the lead in the 60th minute when second-rower Leka Halasima leapt high to take a Tanah Boyd bomb and dived across the line for a converted try. Nikorima blew a chance to take the lead with seven minutes remaining when he knocked on an Katoa grubber in the in-goal. The visitors then lost veteran forward Felise Kaufusi to the sin bin for a dangerous tackle, taking out the legs of Jacob Laban. But Watene-Zelezniak's penalty for a high tackle on Max Fegai gave them another sniff and Isaako, who normally would have taken the penalty goal, still delivered. Warriors coach Andrew Webster said his side wasn't going to "kick stones" over the defeat. "There's so many good signs but it's hard to take obviously because it's such a dramatic finish," he said. "No-one is going to lie, you get your hopes up ... and then it gets taken away from you and that's hard, but we've got to move on."