Cooper must play pivot: Horan

Cooper must play pivot: Horan

31.08.2009
Wallabies great Tim Horan believes it`s time Matt Giteau was unshackled from the playmaking duties and moved back to run amok at inside centre.

Horan, who played the bulk of his 80 Tests in the Australia No.12 jersey, would like to see Giteau wear it again, and have the dynamic Quade Cooper promoted to start at five eighth against South Africa.

Cooper is in doubt for Saturday night`s Tri-Nations Test at Suncorp Stadium with a knee injury but coach Robbie Deans also has Berrick Barnes as a serious five-eighth option.

Barnes, who missed the 32-25 loss in Perth, returned to training on Monday afternoon at Ballymore while his mercurial Queensland teammate Cooper was left to rest his low-grade medial ligament strain.

Barnes is the more likely inside backs reinforcement but Horan was in no doubt Giteau needs to have more opportunities to run the ball wider from the position he started his career.

The former Test selector liked what he saw in the final 10 minutes at Subiaco Oval when Cooper expertly fed Giteau - both out wide and inside, including for one try - to have the Springboks guessing.

"There`s no doubt Gits is one of the best 10s going around but he`s also one of the best 12s going around," Horan said.

"I think it was evident when Quade came on the space he was able to provide to Giteau wider because of the passes that he was throwing.

"You have to keep in mind the game was gone but I thought Quade really impressed and added some spark."

Horan felt the five-Test rookie also had the speed and element of surprise on his side to help break the stiff Springbok defence which has also been effective in slowing down Australian phase play.

"If Quade is fit I`d like to see Quade at 10," he said.

"You either have to go wide or go in through the middle, there`s no point going in between.

"Either (Cooper), or if Barnes plays, and has 10 on his back or 12 on his back, he needs to play a lot more at first-receiver position.

"It certainly helps when Giteau`s got a second receiver there and someone else to step in."

Giteau, still one of the Wallabies best in Perth, knew he had to lift in attack without the injured Barnes alongside him, but missed him more in defence.

Australia paid the price twice due to miscommunication between the playmaker and stop-gap inside centre Adam Ashley-Cooper by conceding first-phase tries.

Barnes is regarded as the Wallabies backline defensive linchpin and it would make sense for him to stay at inside centre in defence, even if Deans wanted him to play first-receiver in attack.

Deans will name his side on Tuesday with Queensland halfback Will Genia poised to replace Luke Burgess, No.8 Richard Brown under pressure from Wycliff Palu, and Drew Mitchell a chance to start on the wing.

While he has more experience at 12 and is prepared to play wherever chosen, Giteau personally hopes Deans retains him as chief playmaker.

"I prefer playing at 10, that`s the position I most enjoy to play," he said.

"At 12 you run wider but it`s hard to control the game."

 

AAP

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A nightmare build-up was bad enough, but nothing compared to the suffering that awaited New South Wales at Suncorp Stadium.

When the dust settled on a spiteful clash, Queensland had staked their claim as Origin`s greatest by sealing a record fifth straight Origin series with a 34-6 victory.

But more pain is expected for fiery NSW backrower Luke O`Donnell.

The Maroons faithful in the 52,452-strong crowd went into party mode as Queensland continued their golden run - a 10-4 win-loss record since their winning streak began in 2006.

Only Queensland`s 13-3 record from 1922-26 is better.

It was going to take something special to take the focus away from the Andrew Johns racial row that had marred NSW`s shocking countdown to Origin II - but it became a subplot after O`Donnell`s brain explosion.

The Cowboys enforcer was considered lucky not to be sent off in the 26th minute when the match erupted following his ugly spear tackle on Maroons winger Darius Boyd.

He was placed on report - but that may be the least of his worries.

After O`Donnell`s shocking tackle sparked an all-in, the fired-up North Queensland forward could be seen headbutting David Taylor as the Queenslander was restrained by NSW`s Joel Monaghan.

While O`Donnell appeared to come off second best in the end after Sam Thaiday had finished with him, the Cowboys backrower looks set to have an even bigger headache when he appears before the judiciary considering his NRL rap sheet.

Not much had gone right for NSW in the countdown to arguably their most important clash in Origin`s 30-year history.

And the trend certainly continued from the kick-off.

Days after Johns` now infamous racial slurs rocked the countdown to Origin II, the question remained: ``How would the Maroons` indigenous stars respond?``

The fired-up Suncorp Stadium crowd didn`t have to wait long for the answer.

In the third minute a pumped Greg Inglis - the focus of Johns` rant that cost him his NSW assistant-coaching gig - had dragged two defenders over to score.

By the 12th, Israel Folau - another reportedly in Johns` sights on last week`s Blues bonding night - had latched onto a floating Willie Tonga pass and crossed with one of his first touches of the game to make it 10-0.

Asked how the Johns saga had affected him, Inglis told Channel Nine: ``It showed in my game tonight.

"I was pretty upset about it, and it`s pretty disappointing."

Cameron Smith gave NSW a sniff when he inexplicably kicked the ball out on the full not once but twice.

Yet by halftime Queensland had crossed again through Darius Boyd (35th minute) to make it 16-0.

It could have been worse. Billy Slater`s 31st minute effort was called back due to a dubious forward pass ruling.

It was more of the same in the second half as Queensland kept scoring, and players kept biffing.

The niggling act between Inglis and NSW centre Beau Scott boiled over in the 57th minute when the pair went toe to toe.

But there was no stopping the Maroons juggernaut as they blew out to a 34-0 lead through Tonga (44th), Folau (48th) and Cooper Cronk (62nd).

After Brett Morris was called back in the 74th minute for off-side, NSW finally got on the board through prop Brett White in the final minute, ensuring Queensland did not seal a record-breaking victory over the Blues.

It was the only solace for a badly beaten Blues outfit on Wednesday night.

In another headache for NSW, Paul Gallen was placed on report for a 23rd minute high shot on Nate Myles.

"I told you I was going to get him back," Gallen could be heard saying on the referee`s microphone.

AAP

Maroons embarrass woeful Blues   06/16/2010
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