State of Origin: Queensland beats NSW on the Gold Coast in controversial clash

Blues legend Andrew Johns has been caught by a hot mic mocking a colleague and ex-player’s attire in a wild and memorable night of State of Origin gaffes.

The former Newcastle Knights and New South Wales captain was accidentally broadcasted calling Queensland great Darren Lockyer as ‘the Boston Stranger’ – referring to his leather gloves.

In the same interview, man of the match Latrell Mitchell told Lockyer he missed the game-tying kick from 50 metres out because his ‘shorts are a bit tight’.

His teammate Josh Addo-Carr was also picked up by on-field microphones screaming ‘I f*cking love this c*nt’ as Jack Wighton scored to give NSW the lead. 

Queensland, who went on to win the game 20-18, were also consistently booed throughout the game despite it being held on the Gold Coast in a storyline-packed dead rubber.  

Andrew Johns was accidentally broadcasted calling Queensland great Darren Lockyer as ‘the Boston Stranger’ – referring to his leather gloves.

Johns’ joke about Lockyer’s gloves refers to infamous serial killer Albert DeSalvo who committed several murders across Boston in the 1960s.

Lockyer was wearing the gloves during interviews, likely as protection gear given the ongoing pandemic.

It was the second time this series hot mics have caught out a Channel 9 personality after Paul Vautin was picked up after game two saying: ‘They may as well call off the third’ after NSW thrashed Queensland in Brisbane.

Latrell Mitchell meanwhile blamed his ‘tight shorts’ for missing a monster 50m penalty that would have levelled scores with a minute to play.

The South Sydney fullback lined up the shot from the half way line, only for it to fall agonisingly short. 

‘My shorts are a bit tight, I don’t know, couldn’t get my legs through,’ Mitchell told Lockyer following the match.

‘But look, everyone dreams of doing that kick and is what it is.’

Johns' joke about Lockyer's gloves refers to infamous serial killer Albert DeSalvo who committed several murders across Boston in the 1960s

Johns’ joke about Lockyer’s gloves refers to infamous serial killer Albert DeSalvo who committed several murders across Boston in the 1960s

Addo-Carr's words were directly picked up by the corner mic after Wighton's tries, as were words between Mitchell and Dane Gagai

Addo-Carr’s words were directly picked up by the corner mic after Wighton’s tries, as were words between Mitchell and Dane Gagai

The Maroons hosted all three games in Queensland due to pandemic logistics, with New South Welshman clearly flooding to the final game to show their support for the winning side

The Maroons hosted all three games in Queensland due to pandemic logistics, with New South Welshman clearly flooding to the final game to show their support for the winning side

The on-field mics also picked up a number of profanity-laced celebrations and disagreements between NSW and Queesland players as the Blues fought for a series sweep and the Maroons battled for pride.

Addo-Carr’s words were directly picked up by the corner mic after Wighton’s tries, as were words between Mitchell and Dane Gagai.

The wild night of State of Origin football culminated in the home town Queenslanders repeatedly being booed throughout the night despite the game being held north of the border.

The Maroons copped it from the crowd from the moment they ran out until the Blues lifted the shield at Cbus Super Stadium in Robina.

They managed to host all three games in Queensland due to pandemic logistics, with New South Welshman clearly flooding to the final game to show their support for the winning side.      

Queensland coach Paul Green has lauded his men after ‘living through’ and prevailing in a classic State of Origin win that restored pride and dashed NSW’s hopes of a rare series clean sweep.

The Maroons won 20-18 at Cbus Super Stadium on the Gold Coast on Wednesday, rallying after losing the lead early in the first half then defending their line as the Blues looked set to break their hearts at the death.

Makeshift hooker Ben Hunt scored twice, Queensland fullback Kalyn Ponga was electric in his first game of the series and punches were thrown on the fulltime siren as Green’s under-pressure side breathed some late life into a series they had already meekly surrendered.

‘We talk about Origin efforts and sometimes don’t know what your’e talking about, but our team lived through that tonight,’ Green said.

‘(I’m) really happy; it was a great win … it was a real Origin-type game and we came out on top.’

New South Wales won their third Origin in four years under Brad Fittler despite going down 20-18 on Wednesday night in Robina

New South Wales won their third Origin in four years under Brad Fittler despite going down 20-18 on Wednesday night in Robina

The Maroons won 20-18 at Cbus Super Stadium on the Gold Coast on Wednesday, rallying after losing the lead early in the first half thanks to two tries from Ben Hunt

The Maroons won 20-18 at Cbus Super Stadium on the Gold Coast on Wednesday, rallying after losing the lead early in the first half thanks to two tries from Ben Hunt

The Blues looked on track for their first series sweep since 2000 when called-up No.6 Jack Wighton burst over for a 12-8 lead early in the second half at Cbus Super Stadium.

But Hunt, usually a halfback at NRL level, darted over from dummy-half then finished off a Ponga break as the Maroons pushed ahead by eight points.

Blues hooker Api Koroisau won the race to a Mitchell Moses grubber-kick though, before first-half tryscorer Latrell Mitchell missed a 50m penalty kick that would have levelled the scores with a minute to play.

A desperate Ponga lunge had earlier knocked down a pass from man-of-the-series Tom Trbojevic that would have led to a try and they showed similar desperation to snuff out the Blues’ last efforts in a well-overdue fighting performance from the hosts.

Queensland were more direct, their forwards more effective and with fullback Ponga floating out the back they, at last, had a presence in the series.

They had just one Hamiso Tabuai-Fidow try and a 8-6 half-time lead to show for it though, at one stage going eight straight sets on the Blues’ line without success.

Like in Brisbane’s Game II, Mitchell was a danger on both sides of the ball, strolling past Dane Gagai for the game’s first try then swiping a Daly Cherry-Evans pass out of the air to defuse another Queensland raid.

The late venue switch to the Gold Coast didn’t have the fortress feel of Suncorp Stadium, jeers greeting the hosts when they ran onto the ground in front of a near-capacity crowd of 26,307.

It didn’t deter Queensland though, who took their first lead of the series after an early penalty and in Tabuai-Fidow seemingly had an answer to Tom Trbojevic’s blinding speed on the flank.

After a 50-6 win in Townsville and a 26-0 shut-out in Brisbane, the Blues steadied and looked set to complete their whistlestop tour of Queensland with a more grinding victory.

Despite the loss, it was still the biggest series margin win in Origin history, the Blues outscoring Queensland by 68 points to eclipse their 62-point margin set in 2000.

‘I don’t think it slipped away, I never felt we were in control at any stage really,’ Blues coach Brad Fittler said.

‘We had our chances at the death but weren’t playing good enough to take those and that’s why they’re (clean sweeps) hard … that was their (Queensland’s) best game of the series without a doubt.’

Valentine Holmes left the game at halftime with a shoulder injury while Junior Paulo was placed on report after the full-time scuffle.

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