ID :
67302
Tue, 06/23/2009 - 19:41
Auther :

Bellamy quiet over NSW backline shuffle

It may be a sign of desperation, but NSW coach Craig Bellamy says he will keep
Queensland guessing as long as possible about the final make-up of his
injury-ravaged side.
So close was Bellamy keeping his cards to his chest ahead of Wednesday night's
must-win game two of the Origin series, you could almost see an imprint of a spade
on his shirt.
Nothing was set in concrete, with captain Kurt Gidley not even guaranteed a start at
fullback.
"We know what we're doing - a lot of people have been guessing and whatever, where
who's going to fit in," Bellamy said.
"We planned a week before if Craig (Wing) was out what we were going to do."
Of course Wing is out, with his strained hamstring opening the door for Josh Morris'
inclusion and a myriad of potential positional swaps.
The x-factor is Gidley, who is equally at home at fullback, in the halves or at hooker.
With winger Jarryd Hayne in sublime form playing in the No.1 at Parramatta, Gidley
becomes the utility player the Blues lost in Wing.
Reports on Tuesday claimed Gidley would be thrown into halfback if Peter Wallace
failed to fire in the opening half hour, but Bellamy dismissed the notion he had
lost confidence in his first-choice No.7.
"If I thought I was going to pull him after 30 minutes, I wouldn't have picked him,"
Bellamy said.
"I've got all the confidence in the world in Peter Wallace.
"He probably wasn't at his best in that first game but there was a few other guys
that weren't either.
"He's done the job before for us, I'm not sure where that story came from."
With the Blues having lurched from one injury to another during their week-long
camp, Wallace has had any number of players line-up outside him at five-eighth.
Recalled veteran Trent Barrett was there for the first few sessions before his back
gave way.
Wing then filled in until his hamstrings could no longer take the strain at which
point Gidley had his crack at pivot.
Still Bellamy believes his combinations have had enough time to gel, the under
pressure coach singling out Barrett for special praise for the way he has brought
the team together.
"His input into meetings has been tremendous," Bellamy said.
"I think that first game everyone was a bit perhaps overawed about being in Origin
and no-one was giving a whole heap of input or their opinion in meetings.
"He's been really good. When he opened up in the first one a few of the other guys
opened up as well.
"He's been tremendous for us on and off the field."
Queensland too are wary of what Barrett brings to the table after they were able to
largely nullify the inexperienced halves combination of Wallace and Terry Campese in
game one.
"He's probably come back I would suggest a better player from his Wigan stint, I
think he's a better player than when he left," Meninga said of Barrett.
"He's obviously in there for stability and experience and a good kicking game and he
can get the team around the park better than maybe they did in the first game ...
that's why he's there."




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