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Revamped Maroons undergo radical reset to take 2026 State of Origin fight to Blues | Jack Snape

about 14 hours ago
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Queensland’s greatest player has been jettisoned and backup has been called in from across the ditch.The side has a new-look halves pairing, as many as five State of Origin debutants, and a new coach.Against New South Wales – the holders of the Women’s Origin shield after their comprehensive victory in 2025 – the Maroons have undergone a radical reset.Back to the drawing board? Try again.New coach Nathan Cross is on his way to Officeworks, imagining a whole new fit-out.

Halfback and vice captain Lauren Brown accepts the northerners are outsiders for Thursday’s clash in Newcastle.“The Blues, they’ve got strike all over the park, they’re a very classy team and they’ve had the liberty of playing together for a while, so they’ve got those combos from previous campaigns and from club land as well,” she said.“But we’re just really focusing on what we do and making sure what we do is right, cancelling out all the outside noise and just kind of focusing on our Maroon ‘little bubble’, and go from there.”The bubble looks different this year.Ali Brigginshaw, co-captain in 2025 alongside the now-promoted Tamika Upton, has retired from Origin after she was benched in the game three dead-rubber.

Though Brigginshaw will no longer take the field, the 36-year-old has stayed connected with the squad in the final year of her playing career.“We are missing her, but it’s also a new campaign,” Brown said.“She’s always messaging me, so I know she’s always a phone call away if there’s anything I need.”In some ways, that third match last year in Newcastle, won by the Maroons 18-14, provided the starting point for this year’s assault on the shield.The skilful Brown was redeployed as the No 7, and will again be responsible for the Maroons’ attack on Thursday.

Unfortunately, her halves partner last year, the electric Tarryn Aiken, is out with a serious knee injury, opening the door for debutant Chantay Kiria-Ratu.The Sharks player was a rookie at the Titans in 2023 alongside Brown, and they have quickly rekindled their connection.“She just brings this really calm, cool composure on the field and obviously she’s got an incredible kicking game which will be a huge asset for our team,” Brown said.State of Origin eligibility changes have paved the way for New Zealand forwards Brianna Clark and Otesa Pule to be part of the Maroons squad.Clark was involved in Origin before committing to the Kiwi Ferns, but Pule is in line for a debut alongside winger Phoenix-Raine Hippi.

Ivana Lolesio and Destiny Mino-Sinapati are the other Queenslanders yet to play in Origin, but they have been named outside the top 17.Brown said the trio of Hippi, Lolesio and Mino-Sinapati have been “incredible assets” in training: “I feel like they came into our pre-series camp and they set the bar and then they just kept raising it.”Cross, who is the Dragons NRLW coach and a former Maroons assistant, replaced Tahnee Norris ahead of this series.He has brought the players in for weekend mini-camps, while his NSW counterpart John Strange has had the luxury of six-week blocks with his players, most of who are based in Sydney.The Blues captain, Isabelle Kelly, leads a more settled side, though one not without changes.

Despite her success as a powerful five-eighth in last year’s series, Tiana Penitani Gray has been shifted to second row.“I’ll have to give Tiana a shout-out, learning a new position and absolutely dominating in training,” Kelly said.The versatile Jocelyn Kelleher will line up at No 6, but Strange played down the change.“I know people see numbers on the back and think that they’ve got to fit into a certain slot, but that’s not how I coach,” he said.“I moved her from the wing to five-eighth last year, she did a great job.

This year she’s going to be wearing the No 11 on her back, but she’ll be doing a similar role to last year, so for me it’s about looking at the characteristics of the player, you know, and getting their strengths out on the field.”Both Kelly and Strange took the opportunity on Wednesday to highlight the promise of Teagen Berry, the Dragons fullback who is in line to make her debut off the bench.“We’ve got ‘Flash’, Teagen Berry, who’s also come in who I’m just so excited for her to debut,” Kelly said.With the NRLW season more than two months away, the Women’s Origin series still occupies an unusual place in the calendar.Players must rely on training to reach the peaks expected by a demanding audience whose appetite for women’s rugby league continues to grow.

Kelly, who has played for the Blues for a decade, said the players will be up for it, and the rush of Origin never goes away.“It never changes, you’re always nervous, you’ve always got that feeling of adrenaline.”
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Sticking with same players for Women’s T20 World Cup leaves England in a twist | Raf Nicholson

Insanity, they say, is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different result. England’s head coach, Charlotte Edwards, is perfectly sane, but on Tuesday she announced a squad for the home T20 World Cup that starts on 12 June almost exactly the same as the one that surrendered the Ashes, by a score of 16-0, 15 months ago. The optics are dreadful.For anyone who has followed England closely over the past year, the conservatism of Edwards and her selection panel comes as no surprise. Last summer, the main selection news was that Kate Cross – who did not play in the Ashes due to injury – was discarded

about 14 hours ago
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The Spin | Knight-Stokes Cup sets up much-needed platform for state school cricket

As a state school-educated international cricketer, the former England bowler Sajid Mahmood has always been in the minority. A report from the Sutton Trust charity last year found 59% of professional male cricketers in England went to independent schools, ranking the sport behind only the armed forces (63%) and senior judges (62%) as the country’s most privately educated profession. Yet Mahmood has become even more of an outlier since his playing retirement.While it is common for former professional cricketers to take up positions as private school coaches once they hang up their playing boots, Mahmood has spent the past eight years teaching the sport to state school students in west London. It is a path so uncommon that he is yet to encounter another England cricketer in the state system

about 20 hours ago
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Luka Dončić and the manosphere: why the scrutiny of his body never ends

In Louis Theroux’s Netflix documentary Inside the Manosphere, he interviews podcasters, streamers and influencers from across the Red Pill ecosystem. But the most profound moments are when he speaks with their followers. Regular, everyday American men who struggle to make a living, find love, get laid and start a family.One of them is a Latino man in his 20s living in Miami. He explains that Andrew Tate’s message helped pull him out of homelessness

about 20 hours ago
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From the Pocket: The AFL’s deference to technology only creates more doubt and uncertainty

When Greg Swann was appointed executive general manager of football performance at the AFL, many saw him as the man to cure all the sport’s ills. He was one of those footy people known primarily by his nickname, a man who projected an air of knockabout affability, a man renowned for getting things done. He would apply “the pub test” to many of football’s most pressing issues: the draft, the rules, the umpiring, the AFL review centre (ARC). “Swanny”, we were assured, was the man who would make footy’s trains run on time.One of the first things Swann’s predecessor, Laura Kane, did in the role was embark on an overseas study tour

about 24 hours ago
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Ultramarathon swimmer sets record pace over 55km in crocodile-filled Australian river

Andy Donaldson and his team were aware of the dangers that lay ahead, but just in case a reminder was needed, a huge 2.5-metre freshwater crocodile waiting at the start ramp ahead of his longest-ever solo swim put the challenge into stark focus.Donaldson, a British-Australian ultramarathon swimmer, was about to embark on the 55km Dam to Dam Challenge from Lake Argyle to Kununurra in the East Kimberley, hoping to become the first man to complete the gruelling endurance swim.Adding to the difficulty was the fact the Ord River in remote Western Australia is well known for its reptilian inhabitants; the freshwater crocodile population numbers 5,500 – one croc for every 10 metres of his swim.Fortunately for the 35-year-old, freshwater crocodiles are smaller and more timid than their saltwater counterparts – the world’s largest reptiles – and unlikely to approach humans

1 day ago
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Cardinals ‘heartbroken’ after former defensive end Josh Mauro dies at age of 35

Former Arizona Cardinals and New York Giants defensive end Josh Mauro has died at the age of 35.Mauro’s father, Greg, confirmed the news in a post on Facebook.“With many tears and broken hearts, yet anchored in the unshakable certainty that our precious Josh Mauro is now healed and made new — living in the presence of the Lord — we humbly covet your prayers as our family walks through the devastating loss of our amazing son, brother, uncle, grandson and friend,” Greg Mauro wrote. “On Thursday, April 23rd, Josh breathed his last breath on this earth and his first breath in heaven.”Two of Mauro’s former teams, the Cardinals and Raiders, paid tribute to the player

1 day ago
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Friendly AI chatbots more likely to support conspiracy theories, study finds

about 14 hours ago
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I’m addicted to checking my phone. Could a blocking device stop me?

about 14 hours ago
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More private health records of UK Biobank volunteers appear on Chinese website

about 17 hours ago
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Meta found in breach of EU law for failing to keep children off platforms

about 20 hours ago
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Meet the AI jailbreakers: ‘I see the worst things humanity has produced’

about 20 hours ago
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‘Stole a charity’: Elon Musk accuses Sam Altman of betrayal in courtroom showdown

1 day ago