Retiring skipper Paul Gallen says he will work with the NSW coach to help select the next Blues captain.But Queensland leader Cameron Smith has already made his mind up - prop Aaron Woods.The curtain will be drawn on Gallens State of Origin career in Wednesday nights game three clash at ANZ Stadium.Gallen volunteered to help hand pick - and mould - the next Blues leader.He hoped to work on the project with besieged NSW coach Laurie Daley next year.Ill discuss that with Laurie over the next 12 months - Im happy to help out there, he said of the next captain.Im happy to talk to any of the boys who need help in getting to that next level.Gallen nominated Wests Tigers skipper Aaron Woods, Sydney Roosters backrower Boyd Cordner and Cronullas Wade Graham as candidates.Thats a tough question, I knew that would come up today, he said.Woods is a captain already, Wade Grahams a captain in the making, Boyd Cordner.Theres a lot of guys but I dont want to put the pressure on anyone.Queensland skipper Smith admitted he would miss Gallen next year but wasted little time offering up a prospective replacement.Aaron Woods is a club captain at the moment, Smith said of 1- Origin prop Woods who took over the Wests Tigers leadership role this year.I would dare say he would be well in the mix to take over.Gallen may be poised to walk away but Smith did not agree with speculation Daley should follow him.Two years after emerging as NSWs saviour, Daley is facing the axe as the Blues assess yet another failed Origin campaign.The 2014 Origin winning coachs time appears up at NSW after losing his second straight series.Craig Bellamy is the only Blues coach in Origin history to have not been sacked after two consecutive series defeats.I think he is a great guy and a wonderful coach - he understands the game, Smith said of Daley.Whether he stays or goes is totally out of our control.But he is good enough to stay there and coach them.Smith said it would be sad to see Daley go after putting his stamp on the Blues side by injecting new blood.Queensland are bracing for Daleys latest discovery - rookie fullback James Tedesco.He has got some youth coming through at the moment - Jack Bird and Tyson Frizell, he said.And Tedesco, hes an extremely dangerous player.If he gets plenty of opportunities he will really hurt us. 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Howie Long Youth Jersey .Y. -- Leading 3-0 with only 11:25 left, the Colorado Avalanche committed a seemingly meaningless penalty to give the New York Islanders a power play. To say Najam Sethi at the PCB has been a shade bullish about the Pakistan Super Leagues prospects would be an understatement. It is understandable, given the PSL was virtually entirely his idea, and it is a mark of his influence at the PCB that the league has come into existence at all. (The public support of Shaharyar Khan, the PCBs chairman, for the project was mystifyingly muted; was it indicative of his thoughts on the whole idea?)Sethis delight at the PSL getting underway was irrepressible. The PSL will be the biggest thing that has hit Pakistan cricket, he said in an interview. He added that, five years down the line, if the PSL were held in Pakistan, it would be far more exciting than any FTP engagement could ever be. The PSL will be more like the IPL than other leagues, he declared.Although Sethis bombastic build-up to the PSL and his eagerness to associate it with the IPL come off as rather transparently insecure, the league has whipped up excitement among Pakistans cricket-starved fans in a way quite unlike anything else in recent memory. Hopes that the PSL will help bring back Pakistans glory days, even bring international cricket back to the country, fly unchecked. The extent and variety of raw young Pakistani talent on display is marvelled at. The number of international stars present is pointed to as proof of the tournaments marketability. Anything less than utter and complete admiration of everything PSL risks coming off as churlish in the extreme.Make no mistake, there is much that the PSL needs to be admired for. It has given Pakistani players the chance to participate in a lucrative T20 league. It has allowed them to gain precious experience sharing dressing rooms with international crickets biggest names, and financial incentives of the sort that have, unfortunately for Pakistani players, been severely curtailed in the past for a multitude of non-cricketing reasons, from a precarious security situation in Pakistan to an unstable political relationship with India. The PSL has greatly boosted the earning potential of young players on Pakistans domestic circuit, many of whom have had to hold part-time jobs, and often had to choose between feeding their passions and their families. It has enabled parts of Pakistan rejected by the cricketing establishment to take pride in their citys exploits. The irony of Quetta being joint top at the end of the group stage, the capital city of a province that has never seen a player turn out at ODI or Test level in Pakistans history, is not lost on anyone who loves a good underdog tale.But fans and administrators alike seem to be laying a greater burden on the shoulders of the tournament than it can possibly bear. Sethi, Ramiz Raja and Wasim Akram among many others have talked up the possibility of the PSL bringing international cricket back to Pakistan. One cannot help wonder how. Cricket did not move away from Pakistan because the countrys appeal went down in cricketing terms - indeed, Pakistan won the T20 World Cup three months after its international isolation began - but because of security issues, which have nothing to do with whether the PSL is a roaring success or a whimpering failure. The PSL could be as successful as the English Premier League and it couldnt bring cricket back to Pakistan as long as the threat of a team bus being ammbushed and attacked by bullets and hand grenades on its way to a stadium remained realistic.dddddddddddd If that is the yardstick by which the event will be measured, the PSL risks being unfairly set up for failure. Moreover, if the concept and layout of T20 league cricket is designed for entertaining, fast-paced cricket, the PSLs format could not have done more to blunt its sharpness more effectively. Five is an awkward number of teams to play in any league, but stipulating that four go through to the knockout round (which isnt actually a knockout, but thats a different story) makes the group stage almost pointless. Thats an unwelcome indictment, given the group stage is more or less the entire tournament. Therefore, all the teams needed to do to stave off elimination was ensure they didnt finish rock bottom, which meant that very soon, Quetta and Peshawar werent playing for too much at all.It also, surely, made Karachi Kings the worst team in the short history of T20 cricket to advance to a round where they were three matches away from winning the entire event. Shoaib Maliks (and then, of course, Ravi Boparas) men were so ordinary by the end of the group stage that they were guaranteed a losing win-loss record, even if they went on to win the tournament. A format that permits this to happen cannot be much more than a work in progress. Surely the only sensible format was the top two teams making the final? Make that a best-of-three if you must. It would be far more exciting to see Quetta and Peshawar play three hard-fought contests between them than the mess that is the current arrangement.The disappointing crowds at almost every game not held on a Friday, particularly in Dubai, have been a sobering reality check. The huge, lifeless stands that have become an unwelcome hallmark of Pakistans adopted home have been in full evidence for large parts of the event. A smattering of passionate support in a small part of the ground does not do nearly enough to dispel the impression of indifference to the PSL in the UAE - which Sethi put down on the eve of the tournament to a tight marketing budget. While it seems hardly fair to criticise the PSL for sparse crowds - it was an inevitable consequence of the tournament not being held in the cities whose teams featured in the league - such a strong lack of interest in the event from the people of the cities where it did take place is a solemn reminder of the work that still lies ahead if the PSL is going to last much longer than its debut season.That will be the greatest challenge of all. For the PSL to have any kind of long-term future, it needs to come back to the country whose name makes up one third of the acronym, and the unlikelihood, at present, of that happening makes its long-term prospects rather bleak.The PSL has done many things right, but there is room for improvement. (It could take on three more teams and adopt a logical format, for starters.) However, a number of factors in Pakistan cricket simply arent within the PSLs power to change, and it is crucial the tournament doesnt become a wishing wand for spectators and administrators alike. It may well fill the PCBs coffers, but it cannot fill Pakistans stadiums. ' ' '