Six months ago, Teagan wanted to quit league. Now she’s making her Origin debut

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Billie Eder

Updated ,first published

Teagan Berry is one of the NRLW’s biggest stars, but she was ready to walk away from rugby league at the end of 2025.

In her fifth season with St George Illawarra, Berry was a mainstay of the Dragons side and became the first player to score 30 NRLW tries. But the fullback wasn’t happy with her performances and no longer enjoyed the game that had given her so much.

Teagan Berry will make her Origin debut in Newcastle on April 30.Steven Siewert

“Towards the end of last season, I honestly didn’t enjoy footy that much,” Berry said. “I was actually thinking about walking away from the game, just because I wasn’t enjoying it.

“I didn’t find it fun coming to training and doing my own training, and it took a lot from my family and my partner to really change that for me.”

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The 23-year-old said the support of her family had convinced her to stick with the game. And in what looms as a stunning turnaround, Berry is now on the cusp of an Origin debut after Blues coach John Strange named her in the No.17 jersey for game one on Thursday night.

“My partner got me out of a dark place at the start of the year, and he’s been my motivation through this,” Berry said. “My family is obviously my motivation to keep going and just to make them proud is all I really play football for.”

Teagan Berry with NSW teammate Kezie Apps. Steven Siewert

Berry starred in the NSW Under-18s team and has been close to a senior call-up in the last few seasons, but the Blues’ talent-stacked side has prevented her from getting a look-in. Until now.

Berry’s performances over a six-week block, during which she trained at fullback and on the wing, convinced Strange to hand her a Blues jersey.

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“Leading into this I feel like I worked very hard. I’ve been disappointed the last couple of years and I feel like I’ve used that as motivation,” Berry said. “I get my chance now, and I’m going to take it with two hands.”

Ironically, Berry’s 2025 season – which she deemed well below her best – impressed Strange enough to select her in his Blues training squad.

NSW Women’s Origin squad for game one

  1. Abbi Church (Parramatta Eels)
  2. Jaime Chapman (Gold Coast Titans)
  3. Jess Sergis (Sydney Roosters)
  4. Isabelle Kelly (Sydney Roosters)
  5. Jayme Fressard (Sydney Roosters)
  6. Jocelyn Kelleher (Sydney Roosters)
  7. Jesse Southwell (Brisbane Broncos)
  8. Millie Elliott (Sydney Roosters)
  9. Keeley Nizza (Sydney Roosters)
  10. Ellie Johnston (Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks)
  11. Tiana Penitani-Gray (Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks)
  12. Yasmin Meakes (Newcastle Knights)
  13. Olivia Kernick (Sydney Roosters)
  14. Olivia Higgins (Newcastle Knights)
  15. Kennedy Cherrington (Parramatta Eels)
  16. Kezie Apps (Wests Tigers)
  17. Teagan Berry* (St George Illawarra Dragons)
  18. Corban Baxter (Sydney Roosters)
  19. Rima Butler* (Sydney Roosters)
  20. Quincy Dodd (Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks)

“Teagan has been in and around the squad for a few years,” Strange said. “I thought it was her best year, last year, for the Dragons at an NRLW level.

“I thought she was very good for the Dragons and then trained really well in the six-week block. Then we had our two in-house trials and I had a couple of chats to her leading into those trials, just more about her backing her own ability and full believing in the talent she has, and she certainly did that.”

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Berry is confident she can handle the step up to senior representative level, having become battle-hardened over five seasons of NRLW.

“It’s a massive step,” she admitted. “When I was coming through, I was probably the skinniest girl in the team, and the girls here are honestly massive. They’re so solid and they’ve worked hard on their bodies to get it right, and I feel like I’ve probably chunked out a little bit to get there as well.”

This Blues star hasn’t played a game in 18 months. Next week she will make her comeback in State of Origin

It’s been more than a year since Millie Elliott played her last professional game of rugby league after the NSW and Australia representative took a year off to have her baby, Gigi.

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But after 18 months on the sidelines, it’s time for the 27-year-old prop to return to the game – and she’ll do so in the Origin arena.

Mother of all comebacks: Blues prop Millie Elliott.Steven Siewert

“It’s just like coming back from injury,” Elliott said. “But you take confidence in the fact that, unfortunately, we haven’t played footy in a long time anyway.

“It’s been about six months since anyone has played, regardless of whether you’ve had a baby or you’ve been injured, or whatever it is. I’ve [had] about 18 months since I played. You lose your fitness within six months anyway, so we’re all kind of back to square one the way I see it.”

Origin will be the first serious hit-out for most players this year when game one of the 2026 series gets under way in Newcastle on April 30.

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Elliott did play an NRL nines game in Las Vegas in March, and has been part of the Blues six-week training block before the Origin season, but it’s still an adjustment stepping into a representative team.

“It’s tough, obviously, coming back into it with a big group of girls … just getting back into the rhythm of playing and ball in hand, defence and backing up and training,” she said.

“We had three field sessions a week, three or four gym sessions a week, so it’s lots of training, but it’s just great to do that in a team environment, because there’s a lot of training that we have to do on our own, and that’s demotivating as hell.”

Being a full-time parent has been an adjustment for Elliott, whose partner, Adam, is also a full-time contracted player with the Rabbitohs. But with her mum moving down from Gold Coast to live with them in Coogee, Elliott said it has allowed both of them to balance parenthood and football.

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But there are some things that change when you become a parent, and Elliott said having her daughter has given her a bit more perspective on the football field.

“I think there’s always a bigger picture than footy – it’s not all just about that,” said Elliott.

“I’m so lucky that bad training sessions or good training sessions, good games or bad games, it’s all just small picture at the end of the day when you come home to a little family.

“I’m so lucky that I have been able to have my little girl, and hopefully a few more to come down the track, but I know that it’s quite a privilege to be able to do that because there are girls that either struggle or struggle with timing when they want to choose footy, your career over starting a family.

“It’s really hard, there’s no right answers with it, and I just feel really happy and content with the way it’s all happened.”

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She’s never played in the pack, but Penitani-Gray is doing it for Origin

Tiana Penitani-Gray has played 13 minutes in the back row – and that was only for an in-house trial a few weeks ago.

When she walks onto McDonald Jones Stadium in Newcastle next Thursday for game one of the 2026 State of Origin series, that’s where she’ll line up as coach John Strange tries to squeeze all the big names into his star-studded NSW team.

The 2026 NSW Blues Women’s Origin team.Oscar Colman

But Strange has no qualms about moving one of his most experienced campaigners – who has played centre and five-eighth for NSW and is a regular in the Australian squad – as his team attempts to retain the Origin shield.

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“I know I look at football different than most coaches and most people, but I just look at the physical attributes they’ve got and the mindset they have. And if you sit down and put all those down on a list, she ticks every box to be an outstanding back-rower,” Strange said of Penitani-Gray.

“We’ve seen her in the centres [and] she loves running lines – that’s a courage thing that not everyone has. She’s also a great defender, she’s a really good communicator, which you need in the back row because in defence you need to communicate with your middle and your edge, and I know she’s aggressive.”

Tiana Penitani-Gray in action for NSW last year.Getty Images

Strange, a premiership- and Origin-winning coach, is so comfortable with his decision because he’s done it before with Yasmin Meakes (formerly Clydsdale), who was a winger and centre when she arrived at the Roosters in 2020, before Strange moved her into the back row. Now Meakes is the best back-rower in the NRLW.

Penitani-Gray’s move to No.11 is one of just a handful of changes to the NSW team that won the shield in 2025.

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Jesse Southwell will have a new partner in the halves, with Jocelyn Kelleher named at five-eighth this year.

Kelleher made her Origin debut in 2025, when instrumental off the bench, and then had an impressive season with the Roosters. But Strange said it was her combination with Southwell that eventually sealed the No.6 jersey for her for game one.

“In my mind, she was either going to be starting five-eighth or No.14 – that was always going to be the case, but I was probably leaning more towards Jocelyn being No.14 over five-eighth because she’s so versatile – she can play 13, nine, and obviously in the halves,” Strange said.

“But the way she trained at five-eighth, with the connection with Jesse, I thought it was really good, and it gives us another kicking option as well … To have her and Jesse as two kicking options both sides of the ruck, I think that’s going to add a little bit of value to us.”

Billie EderBillie Eder is a sports reporter at The Sydney Morning Herald.Connect via X or email.

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Disclaimer : This story is auto aggregated by a computer programme and has not been created or edited by DOWNTHENEWS. Publisher: www.smh.com.au