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Sam Thaiday : Digital Image Charles Knight © NRLphotos. NRL Rugby League, State of Origin I team announcement, Brisbane, May 19th 2015.

This story appeared first on NRL.com - By Matt Harris

On Wednesday night it will be almost 13 years to the day when Sam Thaiday first ran out onto ANZ Stadium in a match that would define his whole rugby league career.

However, the venue for where it all began for Thaiday wasn't Sydney's Olympic Stadium but rather the Queensland Sport and Athletics Centre, more commonly known by its former names QE II or ANZ Stadium when it was the home ground of the Brisbane Broncos from 1993 to 2003.

The date was Wednesday June 5, 2002, and amongst the 48,000 passionate Queenslanders in attendance to watch the Maroons level the series with a 26-18 victory was a 17-year-old self-confessed chubby kid from Townsville.

Thaiday had only travelled down to the big smoke of Brisbane on a handful of occasions prior to that date and had been at the old ANZ Stadium once before to represent North Queensland in Little Athletics.

In this instance Thaiday was in town to play for the Queensland under-17s against their New South Wales counterparts in the curtain raiser for Origin II.

Coming up against red-hot side with a forward pack boasting future household names such as Sonny Bill Williams, Ashton Sims, Keith Galloway, Tom Learoyd-Lahrs, Bronson Harrison, Heath L'Estrange, Justin Poore and former Gold Coast and Roosters forward Daniel Conn, the junior Maroons were flogged 40-16 by the Mick Potter-led Blues.

The only players in the Maroons side that were able to carve out meaningful NRL careers were Thaiday, South Sydney's Ben Lowe and former Penrith hooker Paul Aiton.

Despite the lopsided scoreboard on that night, Thaiday performed admirably for Queensland after coming off the bench and refusing to take a backwards step against a monster Blues pack.

"They had a gun team and a lot of players who went on to play NRL," Thaiday told NRL.com.

"We were a lot smaller team. We were the underdogs big time – it was like men playing against kids – it was a tough old clash.

"They had players like Sonny Bill-Williams, Tom Learoyd-Lahrs and big Keith Galloway. They had some fantastic forwards and we struggled throughout the whole match.

"I hung in there in a team which was full of these young kids that were probably out of their league."

Only minutes after entering the match Thaiday had found himself inside the middle of an on-field brawl, taking on half the NSW team in a typical push-and-shove showdown and being sin-binned for 10 minutes in the process.

Upon returning to the field the back-rower produced the typical bustling, hard-running and hard-hitting display which rugby league fans have become accustomed to watching over his 218-game NRL career.

Thaiday's actions that night raised the eyebrows of Queensland and Brisbane coach Wayne Bennett, who instructed Broncos' recruiter, the late Cyril Connell, to sign up the enforcer who attended Kirwin State High School.

"I just tried to do my best that night and I was lucky enough that I put in a good enough performance that Wayne Bennett noticed me out there on the field. It wasn't long after that he'd sent up a couple of recruitment agents up to Townsville to sign me," Thaiday said.

"So that was probably a turning point game in my whole career that put me on the map as a rugby league player and has put me in the position I am today."

Acknowledgement of Country

Queensland Rugby League respects and honours the Traditional Custodians of the land and pay our respects to their Elders past, present and future. We acknowledge the stories, traditions and living cultures of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples on the lands we meet, gather and play on.

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