Clyde. Daley. Fittler. Mullins.
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Just those four surnames alone show the rarified air in which this year's NSW team will waft if they can emulate the 1994 triumph in Brisbane on Wednesday.
They were the four try scorers in the 27-12 win over Queensland at Lang Park in the decider.
And I can still vividly remember as an impressionable 12-year-old watching Benny Elias, who'd already overcommitted in defence, snatching an intercept off Alfie Langer like a thief in the night and providing for Brad Clyde to run away to score.
It was a series won in defiance of Mark Coyne's 'that's not a try, it's a miracle' in the opener at the Sydney Football Stadium and Mal Meninga's Origin swansong.
So NSW fans still giddy about levelling the series in fine style can do with the reality check.
The television ratings and COVID-restricted crowds may be down, as well as the the end-of-season vibe making this year vastly different.
But this would be an iconic victory, to win three series in a row and bury the Queensland era of dominance which preceded it.
Now as coach, Brad Fittler was ramming home the point of just how difficult would be at Suncorp Stadium in the aftermath of the 34-10 rout in Sydney.
"It's proven [it's one of the toughest things to do]," Fittler said. "In 40 years we have done it twice. It's not easy.
"That's what Origin is always about, going up there and trying to win. They talk about their spirit, whatever it is they just play better up there."
There were doubts over the halves combination, as Fittler replaced Luke Keary for Cody Walker and kept the faith in under-fire Nathan Cleary, who produced a magical kicking performance to level the series.
There were doubts over having Dally M-winning five-eighth Jack Wighton and Parramatta fullback Clint Gutherson as the centres.
But as the Blues marched to victory on Wednesday it reminded me of the words the late, great Steelers coach Graham Murray used to say.
"Pick your best players, then work out where to put them," Murray would often say when this columnist was ghost writing his weekly piece in the Mercury.
Fittler was in the centres in 1994 when NSW won in Brisbane and did not become the regular starting five-eighth until two years later, in a 31-game Origin career.
The second deciding win in Brisbane came in 2005, the end of the Blues' last golden age.
NSW are also assuming Cameron Munster will be fit for game three, after coming off because of a head knock.
While Ben Hunt is an experienced half and Origin campaigner, it unsettled their combinations from game one.
NSW should be bracing for the ambush lying in wait.