logo
Slater names three rookies for Origin opener

Slater names three rookies for Origin opener

Perth Now19-05-2025

Queensland coach Billy Slater has named three debutants for the State of Origin series opener after a chaotic weekend of injuries forced several changes for the Maroons who are looking to win back the shield after last year's 2-1 defeat.
Roosters rookie Robert Toia is the bolter in the squad, with the 20-year-old picked after just 10 NRL appearances this season after finally getting the chance to play following several
He'll start at right centre, with Slater also picking Beau Fermor and Trent Loiero to make their Queensland debuts off the bench.
'Things change all the time and we had some things happen last night that were out of our control,' Slater said.
'You wait until that selection time, you get all those health reports and you pick Queensland's best team, and that's what we've felt we've done.
'Robert Toia, I've been watching him closely – not just the stuff he's been doing with the football – but he's got good principles in his game.
'I know his coach at the Roosters has got a really high opinion of that part of his game, and that phone call last night is one I'll remember for a long time.
'I think he's a world-class centre. Although he's only 10 games into his NRL career, he's been through a bit of adversity.'
It was a costly weekend for the Maroons, with Origin hopefuls Tom Gilbert (pec), Murray Taulagi (calf) and Selwyn Cobbo (wrist) all ruled out, while Reece Walsh is also unavailable as the superstar fullback continues to recover from a knee issue.
Daly Cherry-Evans will captain the side despite not being at his best for the Sea Eagles, with the veteran halfback to partner the returning Cameron Munster who missed last year's series through injury.
Tom Dearden will play the utility role off the bench, with Jeremiah Nanai to start in the back row after finding form following his shock demotion to reserve grade earlier this season.
Kurt Mann, Jesse Arthars and Kulikefu Finefeuiaki are all part of the extended squad.
1. Kalyn Ponga (Newcastle Knights)
2. Xavier Coates (Melbourne Storm)
3. Robert Toia (Sydney Roosters)
4. Hamiso Tabuai-Fidow (Dolphins)
5. Valentine Holmes (St George Illawarra Dragons)
6. Cameron Munster (Melbourne Storm)
7. Daly Cherry-Evans © (Manly Sea Eagles)
8. Moeaki Fotuaika (Gold Coast Titans)
9. Harry Grant (Melbourne Storm)
10. Tino Fa'asuamaleaui (Gold Coast Titans)
11. Reuben Cotter (North Queensland Cowboys)
12. Jeremiah Nanai (North Queensland Cowboys)
13. Patrick Carrigan (Brisbane Broncos)
14. Tom Dearden (North Queensland Cowboys)
15. Lindsay Collins (Sydney Roosters)
16. Beau Fermor (Gold Coast Titans)
17. Trent Loiero (Melbourne Storm)
18. Kurt Mann (Canterbury-Bankstown Bulldogs)
19. Jesse Arthars (Brisbane Broncos)
20. Kulikefu Finefeuiaki (Dolphins)

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Two plays that show this Raider can answer Origin SOS
Two plays that show this Raider can answer Origin SOS

West Australian

timean hour ago

  • West Australian

Two plays that show this Raider can answer Origin SOS

Corey Horsburgh is ready to answer Queensland's call and his last fortnight's work for the high-flying Canberra Raiders proves he has the Origin traits and habits Billy Slater demands. Maroons coach Slater conceded Horsburgh was stiff to miss out on selection for the opening game of the series where Queensland were manhandled by NSW in a 18-6 defeat in Brisbane. Needing to save the series, Slater is preparing to name his team for game two in Perth on June 18. Horsburgh will be out to make an impression in his final audition on Sunday when the Raiders host South Sydney. But over the last two weeks, the prop has already shown the traits Slater is looking for to help the Green Machine rise to second on the NRL ladder. In a gritty win over the Warriors in Auckland in round 12, Horsburgh and teammate Morgan Smithies pulled off a try-saving tackle on Marata Niukore in the dying stages. And last Sunday, in the Raiders' 26-24 win over the Sydney Roosters, it was Horsburgh who jolted the ball loose from Victor Radley's grasp with the game on the line. Horsburgh (112m) also clocked up more metres than the Roosters' two Origin props - fellow Queenslander Lindsay Collins (47m) and NSW prop Spencer Leniu (42m) - combined. And the 27-year-old, who has just one solitary Queensland appearance to name, is eager to channel those efforts into Origin and help Slater's men square the series. "You can't take it (an omission) to heart but I just focus on winning," Horsburgh told AAP. "We won last week, we won this week and as long as the Raiders are winning... if my phone rings for game two, I'm ready. "I'm playing in a different role to 2023 when I was at lock. (There was) no feedback on why I didn't make it or anything. "I'm just trying to play consistent footy and if the phone rings I'm ready, but if not hopefully they can get the job done over the next two games." Canberra can finish round 14 in top spot with a win over Souths in Horsburgh's 100th NRL game. Josh Papali'i will also surpass Jason Croker and become the most-capped player in Raiders' history in his 319th NRL game. Horsburgh's road to his milestone has been fraught with highs and lows and as recently as last year the prop was on the outer after a 2024 campaign that was wrecked by injury and suspension. "I don't care about mine, Papa's (milestone) is a big one - beating the club record is pretty special," Horsburgh said. "I missed his 300th last year from not playing the best footy so it's one I don't want to miss. "I've had bad injuries but I'm a pretty resilient person who can bounce back from stuff like that. "I identified last year was more my fault and I've trained hard and got my body right to reap the rewards now... hopefully this year we can do something special."

Two plays that show this Raider can answer Origin SOS
Two plays that show this Raider can answer Origin SOS

Perth Now

timean hour ago

  • Perth Now

Two plays that show this Raider can answer Origin SOS

Corey Horsburgh is ready to answer Queensland's call and his last fortnight's work for the high-flying Canberra Raiders proves he has the Origin traits and habits Billy Slater demands. Maroons coach Slater conceded Horsburgh was stiff to miss out on selection for the opening game of the series where Queensland were manhandled by NSW in a 18-6 defeat in Brisbane. Needing to save the series, Slater is preparing to name his team for game two in Perth on June 18. Horsburgh will be out to make an impression in his final audition on Sunday when the Raiders host South Sydney. But over the last two weeks, the prop has already shown the traits Slater is looking for to help the Green Machine rise to second on the NRL ladder. In a gritty win over the Warriors in Auckland in round 12, Horsburgh and teammate Morgan Smithies pulled off a try-saving tackle on Marata Niukore in the dying stages. And last Sunday, in the Raiders' 26-24 win over the Sydney Roosters, it was Horsburgh who jolted the ball loose from Victor Radley's grasp with the game on the line. Horsburgh (112m) also clocked up more metres than the Roosters' two Origin props - fellow Queenslander Lindsay Collins (47m) and NSW prop Spencer Leniu (42m) - combined. And the 27-year-old, who has just one solitary Queensland appearance to name, is eager to channel those efforts into Origin and help Slater's men square the series. "You can't take it (an omission) to heart but I just focus on winning," Horsburgh told AAP. "We won last week, we won this week and as long as the Raiders are winning... if my phone rings for game two, I'm ready. "I'm playing in a different role to 2023 when I was at lock. (There was) no feedback on why I didn't make it or anything. "I'm just trying to play consistent footy and if the phone rings I'm ready, but if not hopefully they can get the job done over the next two games." Canberra can finish round 14 in top spot with a win over Souths in Horsburgh's 100th NRL game. Josh Papali'i will also surpass Jason Croker and become the most-capped player in Raiders' history in his 319th NRL game. Horsburgh's road to his milestone has been fraught with highs and lows and as recently as last year the prop was on the outer after a 2024 campaign that was wrecked by injury and suspension. "I don't care about mine, Papa's (milestone) is a big one - beating the club record is pretty special," Horsburgh said. "I missed his 300th last year from not playing the best footy so it's one I don't want to miss. "I've had bad injuries but I'm a pretty resilient person who can bounce back from stuff like that. "I identified last year was more my fault and I've trained hard and got my body right to reap the rewards now... hopefully this year we can do something special."

Honesty session that inspired Panthers' crucial win
Honesty session that inspired Panthers' crucial win

The Advertiser

time2 hours ago

  • The Advertiser

Honesty session that inspired Panthers' crucial win

Penrith drew a line in the sand while their superstars were away in State of Origin camp, meeting for an honesty session that helped inspire the crucial win over Parramatta. Panthers coach Ivan Cleary had publicly called on the squad to begin realising their potential after they suffered their biggest loss of the year to strugglers Newcastle in round 12. The four-time reigning premiers had sputtered into last place on the ladder and would've sat there later in the season than any defending premiers since 1953 if they lost to the Eels in round 13. Without their five NSW representatives, including Nathan Cleary and Isaah Yeo, hooker Mitch Kenny and the remaining senior players convened the squad for some tough love before the Eels game. "All of us got together... and put the line in the sand, what needs to be better, especially standards-wise," centre Casey McLean told AAP. "It was a player-driven thing. All the boys kind of knew what needed to happen." The focus of the heart-to-heart session was to remind the players that results would continue to be lacklustre without a lift in training intensity. "Just flip that switch at training, just training habits and things like that led into what happened (against the Eels)," McLean said. Star halfback Cleary noticed the lift in intensity on return from Origin duties, admitting the club's standards may have slipped during a disappointing 2025 season. "A few of the boys were talking about how hard the week at training had been," he said. "Maybe that's where we'd been lacking, just dropping our standards a little bit. I thought young guys like Casey were really good." McLean had his best game of the year against the Eels, scoring a try and setting one up to help the Panthers to the kind of gritty win that became their trademark in four premiership seasons. The improved performance was the latest twist in a rollercoaster first 12 months in the NRL for McLean, who was dropped to reserve grade after the round-eight loss to Manly. Conversations with coach Cleary reassured the 19-year-old during his two weeks out of the NRL team. "He just says it's a journey. Not everything's going to be highs, so you've got to ride the lows as well," McLean said. "It's just all learning, you can't take things as negatives. You've got to take everything as a positive, find ways to improve, move forward and this (18-10 win over the Eels) showcases what happens, I suppose." Penrith drew a line in the sand while their superstars were away in State of Origin camp, meeting for an honesty session that helped inspire the crucial win over Parramatta. Panthers coach Ivan Cleary had publicly called on the squad to begin realising their potential after they suffered their biggest loss of the year to strugglers Newcastle in round 12. The four-time reigning premiers had sputtered into last place on the ladder and would've sat there later in the season than any defending premiers since 1953 if they lost to the Eels in round 13. Without their five NSW representatives, including Nathan Cleary and Isaah Yeo, hooker Mitch Kenny and the remaining senior players convened the squad for some tough love before the Eels game. "All of us got together... and put the line in the sand, what needs to be better, especially standards-wise," centre Casey McLean told AAP. "It was a player-driven thing. All the boys kind of knew what needed to happen." The focus of the heart-to-heart session was to remind the players that results would continue to be lacklustre without a lift in training intensity. "Just flip that switch at training, just training habits and things like that led into what happened (against the Eels)," McLean said. Star halfback Cleary noticed the lift in intensity on return from Origin duties, admitting the club's standards may have slipped during a disappointing 2025 season. "A few of the boys were talking about how hard the week at training had been," he said. "Maybe that's where we'd been lacking, just dropping our standards a little bit. I thought young guys like Casey were really good." McLean had his best game of the year against the Eels, scoring a try and setting one up to help the Panthers to the kind of gritty win that became their trademark in four premiership seasons. The improved performance was the latest twist in a rollercoaster first 12 months in the NRL for McLean, who was dropped to reserve grade after the round-eight loss to Manly. Conversations with coach Cleary reassured the 19-year-old during his two weeks out of the NRL team. "He just says it's a journey. Not everything's going to be highs, so you've got to ride the lows as well," McLean said. "It's just all learning, you can't take things as negatives. You've got to take everything as a positive, find ways to improve, move forward and this (18-10 win over the Eels) showcases what happens, I suppose." Penrith drew a line in the sand while their superstars were away in State of Origin camp, meeting for an honesty session that helped inspire the crucial win over Parramatta. Panthers coach Ivan Cleary had publicly called on the squad to begin realising their potential after they suffered their biggest loss of the year to strugglers Newcastle in round 12. The four-time reigning premiers had sputtered into last place on the ladder and would've sat there later in the season than any defending premiers since 1953 if they lost to the Eels in round 13. Without their five NSW representatives, including Nathan Cleary and Isaah Yeo, hooker Mitch Kenny and the remaining senior players convened the squad for some tough love before the Eels game. "All of us got together... and put the line in the sand, what needs to be better, especially standards-wise," centre Casey McLean told AAP. "It was a player-driven thing. All the boys kind of knew what needed to happen." The focus of the heart-to-heart session was to remind the players that results would continue to be lacklustre without a lift in training intensity. "Just flip that switch at training, just training habits and things like that led into what happened (against the Eels)," McLean said. Star halfback Cleary noticed the lift in intensity on return from Origin duties, admitting the club's standards may have slipped during a disappointing 2025 season. "A few of the boys were talking about how hard the week at training had been," he said. "Maybe that's where we'd been lacking, just dropping our standards a little bit. I thought young guys like Casey were really good." McLean had his best game of the year against the Eels, scoring a try and setting one up to help the Panthers to the kind of gritty win that became their trademark in four premiership seasons. The improved performance was the latest twist in a rollercoaster first 12 months in the NRL for McLean, who was dropped to reserve grade after the round-eight loss to Manly. Conversations with coach Cleary reassured the 19-year-old during his two weeks out of the NRL team. "He just says it's a journey. Not everything's going to be highs, so you've got to ride the lows as well," McLean said. "It's just all learning, you can't take things as negatives. You've got to take everything as a positive, find ways to improve, move forward and this (18-10 win over the Eels) showcases what happens, I suppose."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store