The New Zealand Herald

Origin: Mate against mate still living up to hype, even in NZ

- Michael Burgess

If you are wondering if State of Origin still matters, check out some of the water cooler talk around your office today.

The annual Australian sporting mini-series is upon us again and it’s bound to provoke conversati­on.

It may not all be positive — people could be complainin­g about the late kickoff times, the elongated build-up, or the incessant hype — but it will still be talked about.

Origin may not be the transtasma­n phenomenon it was in the late 1980s and early 1990s but it’s still a big deal around New Zealand.

Even casual league watchers will tune in for at least some of tonight’s opener, maybe just to see Phil Gould’s infamous pre-game monologue and shuffle across the turf, or how many ex-players get camera time during the lead-in.

There will be interest in any fireworks in the first few sets, and the latest technical and camera innovation­s that host broadcaste­r Channel Nine has come up with.

The enduring interest is quite some feat, especially in the age of fickle attention spans and the constant desire for something new.

Origin has been going almost 40 years. The 37th edition starts tonight but there remains an unquenchab­le thirst for what is, after all, just a game between two Australian states on the eastern seaboard.

Kiwis wouldn’t be interested in the rugby, netball, football or cricket equivalent but there is something about the league series that never ceases to fascinate.

Maybe it’s the tribalism that is rare in New Zealand sport.

And there are always storylines aplenty, as young stars emerge, or old heroes are revived.

Crowds continue to flock to games, and television ratings are often through the roof (in 2017, only the Cinderella story of Roger Federer and Rafa Nadal in the Australian Open tennis final topped it as the most watched sports event in Australia).

Sure, there has been the odd dull game and some have predicted Origin’s demise over the years.

Even Queensland’s recent dominance (they’ve triumphed in 11 of the last 12 years) hasn’t killed the golden goose, whereas, as a parallel, interest in the Bledisloe Cup has nosedived with the ongoing All Blacks supremacy.

But Origin mostly continues to deliver and live up to the occasion — just look at last year.

Queensland were smashed 28-4 in the first match and on the ropes when they trailed 16-6 with less than 30 minutes to play in the second game.

But they found a way back, with Johnathan Thurston defying a shoulder injury (which ended his club season) to orchestrat­e the Maroons comeback, before they won the decider in Brisbane a week later.

The Origin footprint was establishe­d here in the late 1980s, with games live on free-to-air television.

A generation of Kiwis adopted a state, with Queensland usually most popular, due to their traditiona­l underdog status.

Interest peaked in 1991 and 1992 when former Kiwis coach Graham Lowe was in charge of the Maroons but has remained relatively high since.

The series has its detractors, especially those that resent the broadcaste­r-driven hype that accompanie­s the matches every June and July.

But there is nothing wrong with celebratin­g history, done before every game, and mostly the action delivers, with some of the best, most intense sport of any code you’ll see all year.

Kiwis wouldn’t be interested in the rugby, netball, football or cricket equivalent but there is something about the league series that never ceases to fascinate.

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