Chris McQueen, Josh Papalii and Matt Gillett will be feeling edgy after indifferent performances against a Blues outfit inspired by the electric Jarryd Hayne and workhorse skipper Paul Gallen, along with some gritty defence across the board.
One safe player for the Maroons is Aidan Guerra, who looked like an Origin veteran in his debut for his state.
The Sydney Rooster made 71m, had three tackle breaks and 21 tackles in his stoic effort off the bench.
"If my form warrants it and Mal wants me in the side, then I definitely want to be here," said Guerra, who looked comfortable in a Maroon jersey.
"Out there with the calibre of players around you, you have to lift to their level. I found myself standing next to Nate Myles, Corey Parker and Matt Scott and I thought 'I can't let them down'.
"I knew the effort that I had to put in to play to their level and I just hope the boys around me thought that I was up to that level."
Much was made about Queensland's relaxed approach in the lead-up to the Origin opener, while it was reported the Blues had left no stone unturned in trying to end the Maroons' dominance, even resorting to monitoring the sleep patterns of their players.
But McQueen defended Queensland's preparations, saying that could not be used as an excuse for the loss.
"We just didn't put it together well enough and that's why we lost."
McQueen said he was confident the Maroons could win the series without their playmaker Cronk.
"We've obviously got Daly and he's a class player," McQueen said.
"I think in terms of our structure we didn't lose too much (when Cronk left the field in the first half) but I think that extra number missing off the bench was a killer."
Winger Brent Tate took faith from the Maroons winning the decider in Sydney last year.
"Sydney is a tough place to win but we've been in this position before," he said.
"I know this team is not going to go down without a fight."
- AAP