Townsville Bulletin

’Perfect’ pair can deliver a miracle Mal, Wayne team up

- PETER BADEL

INJURY-TORN Queensland has pulled out the big guns with NRL Immortal Mal Meninga to join forces with Wayne Bennett in a coaching dream team plotting a “Maroons miracle” in the Origin series.

Queensland Rugby League chairman Bruce Hatcher confirmed Bennett had hired Meninga as his assistant as the 70-year-old super coach leaves no stone unturned in his quest to engineer another Maroons fairytale.

Queensland is a rank outsider to win this year’s historic November series following a slew of injuries to incumbents headlined by Kalyn Ponga, Michael Morgan, Moses Mbye and David Fifita, while Cameron Munster is in grave doubt with a knee problem.

But Bennett is confident he can reprise his 2001 Origin heroics after enlisting Australia coach Meninga, who offered his services due to the COVID pandemic, which has put internatio­nal football on hold.

The NRL Immortal is statistica­lly the greatest coach in Origin history, having won nine of 10 series, with Hatcher backing the Bennett-meninga alliance to snap NSW’S quest for a third consecutiv­e title.

“I never thought this day would come. It’s a Maroons miracle,” Hatcher said.

“We will have a very young side and to have those two guys mentoring the team, I’m sure it will be a huge boost for team morale.

“I believe their skills are complement­ary. There are a number of things Wayne does well and Mal does other things particular­ly well and when you put them together you basically have the perfect coach.

“For them to come back in a time where NSW think they have won the series 3-0, their confidence, aura and experience will help enormously.”

Bennett and Meninga have had a 40-year relationsh­ip dating back to their time at the Queensland Police Academy.

But the pair fell out briefly in 2015 when they both applied for the Kangaroos post, with Bennett ruffling feathers when he blasted Meninga’s desire to take on the role full-time, arguing coaching Australia was a part-time position.

Meninga ultimately prevailed and the duo ended up on a collision course when Bennett agreed to coach England, which lost 6-0 to Australia in the 2017 World Cup final.

But Bennett and Meninga have since smoked the peace pipe and have held a number of discussion­s over the past week as they combine their formidable coaching talents in a bid to bring down the Blues.

Between them, Bennett and Meninga have collective­ly coached Queensland in 18 Origin series. They have won 31 of 52 games, a combined winning rate of almost 60 per cent.

Just a fortnight ago, Meninga missed out to Bennett for the Queensland Origin job for this year’s series after Kevin Walters was forced to stand down.

“Wayne and Mal had some chats and they have got on like a house on fire over this,” Hatcher said.

“I am glad that Wayne and Mal have sorted out their difference­s and can channel their energies into winning the Origin series for Queensland.”

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