Latest news with #Horsburgh


The Advertiser
3 days ago
- Sport
- The Advertiser
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." 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." 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."
Yahoo
3 days ago
- General
- Yahoo
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. Red and Morgs save the day 👏#WeAreRaiders — Canberra Raiders (@RaidersCanberra) May 25, 2025 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."


West Australian
3 days ago
- Sport
- 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."


Perth Now
3 days ago
- Sport
- 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."


The Advertiser
29-05-2025
- Sport
- The Advertiser
Red alert as Horsburgh enters Origin frame for Maroons
Queensland must find a way to fight fire with fire against the strong NSW pack, hence Canberra firebrand Corey Horsburgh has entered the equation for a State of Origin recall. There are myths surrounding the Raiders rocket, affectionately known as "Big Red" and "Horse" by fans. One of those myths is that he is just a throwback to the 1980s who will take it to the opposition with a no-holds-barred approach. There is more to the 27-year-old than that worthy methodology. Maroons coach Billy Slater looks for Origin-like habits in his players and Horsburgh epitomised that in second-placed Canberra's recent 16-10 win over the Warriors. With time almost up on the clock, giant Warriors back-rower Marata Niukore charged towards the line for a try that would have levelled the match. Horsburgh appeared from nowhere to turn Niukore on his back centimetres from the line to save a certain four-pointer. The Raiders stalwart debuted for the Maroons in the dead-rubber game three of the 2023 Origin series which they lost. The 2025 series will go down the gurgler if the Maroons don't win in Perth on June 18 after their dismal 18-6 opening loss in Brisbane on Wednesday night. Queensland needs an enforcer to take on beastly Payne Haas and company. Horsburgh has 20 tackle breaks and 19 offloads in his 11 NRL games this year. He also has a tackle efficiency of 95.2 per cent and has averaged 134m per match in attack. It is a stellar record. Former Maroons star Ben Ikin, now the Queensland Rugby League CEO, was asked before game one about Horsburgh's omission and whether he would get another chance. "I'd say to Corey to keep playing the way you are playing and eventually you are going to find yourself in a Maroons jersey," Ikin said. "He embodies what it means to be a Queenslander. He is full of passion and is in a team that is playing outstanding footy. The Maroons program is in a pretty good place when someone like Corey Horsburgh can't make the team." NSW great and Channel Nine commentator Andrew Johns is also a fan. "I think there has to be changes with Corey Horsburgh, he's one I think can add something," Johns said when analysing the Maroons' loss. Horsburgh will line up against the Sydney Roosters and South Sydney in the next fortnight where he can make a compelling Origin statement. "Hopefully I can keep playing good footy at the Raiders and put my name in the picture but the Queensland side is not an easy team to get into," Horsburgh told AAP. "I was lucky enough to do it and that's my goal again this year. "When I was a young fella I would watch Origin and I looked up to Petero Civoniceva and Matt Scott ... big tough front-rowers that never took a backward step." Rabbitohs forward Jai Arrow and versatile Warriors gun Kurt Capewell are two other former Origin representatives that could stake a claim. Maroons coach Billy Slater has also had his eye on Dolphins young gun Max Plath. Plath is expected back from a foot injury for the round 14 clash with St George Illawarra and could be an option as a utility on the bench. Queensland must find a way to fight fire with fire against the strong NSW pack, hence Canberra firebrand Corey Horsburgh has entered the equation for a State of Origin recall. There are myths surrounding the Raiders rocket, affectionately known as "Big Red" and "Horse" by fans. One of those myths is that he is just a throwback to the 1980s who will take it to the opposition with a no-holds-barred approach. There is more to the 27-year-old than that worthy methodology. Maroons coach Billy Slater looks for Origin-like habits in his players and Horsburgh epitomised that in second-placed Canberra's recent 16-10 win over the Warriors. With time almost up on the clock, giant Warriors back-rower Marata Niukore charged towards the line for a try that would have levelled the match. Horsburgh appeared from nowhere to turn Niukore on his back centimetres from the line to save a certain four-pointer. The Raiders stalwart debuted for the Maroons in the dead-rubber game three of the 2023 Origin series which they lost. The 2025 series will go down the gurgler if the Maroons don't win in Perth on June 18 after their dismal 18-6 opening loss in Brisbane on Wednesday night. Queensland needs an enforcer to take on beastly Payne Haas and company. Horsburgh has 20 tackle breaks and 19 offloads in his 11 NRL games this year. He also has a tackle efficiency of 95.2 per cent and has averaged 134m per match in attack. It is a stellar record. Former Maroons star Ben Ikin, now the Queensland Rugby League CEO, was asked before game one about Horsburgh's omission and whether he would get another chance. "I'd say to Corey to keep playing the way you are playing and eventually you are going to find yourself in a Maroons jersey," Ikin said. "He embodies what it means to be a Queenslander. He is full of passion and is in a team that is playing outstanding footy. The Maroons program is in a pretty good place when someone like Corey Horsburgh can't make the team." NSW great and Channel Nine commentator Andrew Johns is also a fan. "I think there has to be changes with Corey Horsburgh, he's one I think can add something," Johns said when analysing the Maroons' loss. Horsburgh will line up against the Sydney Roosters and South Sydney in the next fortnight where he can make a compelling Origin statement. "Hopefully I can keep playing good footy at the Raiders and put my name in the picture but the Queensland side is not an easy team to get into," Horsburgh told AAP. "I was lucky enough to do it and that's my goal again this year. "When I was a young fella I would watch Origin and I looked up to Petero Civoniceva and Matt Scott ... big tough front-rowers that never took a backward step." Rabbitohs forward Jai Arrow and versatile Warriors gun Kurt Capewell are two other former Origin representatives that could stake a claim. Maroons coach Billy Slater has also had his eye on Dolphins young gun Max Plath. Plath is expected back from a foot injury for the round 14 clash with St George Illawarra and could be an option as a utility on the bench. Queensland must find a way to fight fire with fire against the strong NSW pack, hence Canberra firebrand Corey Horsburgh has entered the equation for a State of Origin recall. There are myths surrounding the Raiders rocket, affectionately known as "Big Red" and "Horse" by fans. One of those myths is that he is just a throwback to the 1980s who will take it to the opposition with a no-holds-barred approach. There is more to the 27-year-old than that worthy methodology. Maroons coach Billy Slater looks for Origin-like habits in his players and Horsburgh epitomised that in second-placed Canberra's recent 16-10 win over the Warriors. With time almost up on the clock, giant Warriors back-rower Marata Niukore charged towards the line for a try that would have levelled the match. Horsburgh appeared from nowhere to turn Niukore on his back centimetres from the line to save a certain four-pointer. The Raiders stalwart debuted for the Maroons in the dead-rubber game three of the 2023 Origin series which they lost. The 2025 series will go down the gurgler if the Maroons don't win in Perth on June 18 after their dismal 18-6 opening loss in Brisbane on Wednesday night. Queensland needs an enforcer to take on beastly Payne Haas and company. Horsburgh has 20 tackle breaks and 19 offloads in his 11 NRL games this year. He also has a tackle efficiency of 95.2 per cent and has averaged 134m per match in attack. It is a stellar record. Former Maroons star Ben Ikin, now the Queensland Rugby League CEO, was asked before game one about Horsburgh's omission and whether he would get another chance. "I'd say to Corey to keep playing the way you are playing and eventually you are going to find yourself in a Maroons jersey," Ikin said. "He embodies what it means to be a Queenslander. He is full of passion and is in a team that is playing outstanding footy. The Maroons program is in a pretty good place when someone like Corey Horsburgh can't make the team." NSW great and Channel Nine commentator Andrew Johns is also a fan. "I think there has to be changes with Corey Horsburgh, he's one I think can add something," Johns said when analysing the Maroons' loss. Horsburgh will line up against the Sydney Roosters and South Sydney in the next fortnight where he can make a compelling Origin statement. "Hopefully I can keep playing good footy at the Raiders and put my name in the picture but the Queensland side is not an easy team to get into," Horsburgh told AAP. "I was lucky enough to do it and that's my goal again this year. "When I was a young fella I would watch Origin and I looked up to Petero Civoniceva and Matt Scott ... big tough front-rowers that never took a backward step." Rabbitohs forward Jai Arrow and versatile Warriors gun Kurt Capewell are two other former Origin representatives that could stake a claim. Maroons coach Billy Slater has also had his eye on Dolphins young gun Max Plath. Plath is expected back from a foot injury for the round 14 clash with St George Illawarra and could be an option as a utility on the bench.