Lance Franklin moved to Queensland following his retirement from professional footy in 2023.
And it appears the West Australian may have become a fully-fledged Queenslander, after he was snapped hanging out with several Maroons stars in the dressing room following their epic State of Origin triumph.
Billy Slater's side produced a dominant 24-12 victory against New South Wales on Wednesday night in Sydney, with Tom Dearden and Cameron Munster standing out as the side's top performers.
Their win was so presiding that the Blues had found themselves 20-0 down at half-time, with Dearden, Xavier Coates and Harry Grant all crossing the try line in the first 40 minutes.
Stephen Crichton and Brian To'o both scored in the second half for the Blues, but it was too little too late for Laurie Daley's side, with man-of-the-match, Dearden, crossing for a second time late on.
Franklin, who currently lives on the Gold Coast with his wife Jesinta, and their children, stepped onto the pitch after the match to chat to chat to several members of the Maroons squad.
Lance Franklin posed for snaps with Billy Slater, Paddy McCartin, Tom Papley and Justin McInerney(pictured, right to left)
Franklin, who lives on the Gold Coast was seen sharing a joke with Maroons assistant coach Johnathan Thurston
He also shared a hug with Queensland coach Billy Slater, following the emotional victory
He was seen sharing a joke with Maroons legend and assistant coach Johnathan Thurston.
In a separate photo, he was joined by Sydney Swans star Justin McInerney, Tom Papley and ex-AFL player Paddy McCartin, as the group posed for a snap with triumphant Queensland coach Billy Slater.
Franklin took a moment to embrace Slater with a big hug after his side's emotional victory, while backstage in the dressing rooms, he joined in on the celebrations, toasting a can of beer with Thurston.
Former Sydney star, McCartin, also published a picture of himself, Franklin and Reece Walsh in the changing rooms sharing a beer after the match.
McCartin, who hails from Tassie captioned the post: 'QLD spirit!'
Queensland Rugby League boss Ben Ikin has lauded Slater's brave coaching, placing the backs-to-the-wall State of Origin success among the Maroons' greatest.
Wednesday night's Origin win immediately earned the 2025 Maroons a place in Queensland folklore, after coming back from 1-0 down with two wins on the road.
It was only a month ago Slater looked under pressure to keep his job, after dropping captain Daly Cherry-Evans.
The Sydney Swans legend then joined the team back in the dressing room and toasted the victory with Thurston with a beer
Franklin (left) and McCartin (right) also enjoyed a quick chat with Maroons star Reece Walsh (centre)
Questions were also asked after Pat Carrigan and Jeremiah Nanai were dropped to the bench for game two, with Kurt Capewell recalled despite defensive concerns.
Slater then banked on Brisbane train-and-triallist Gehamat Shibasaki for the decider, in one of the most inexperienced centre pairings in history alongside Robert Toia.
Veteran prop Josh Papali'i's recall from Origin retirement was also inspirational, three years after his last game for Queensland.
The call to drop Cherry-Evans was also vindicated, with replacement Tom Dearden man of the series and leading a near-perfect attack and gutsy defence in Sydney.
'It was incredible stuff,' QRL chief executive Ikin told AAP.
'It's one thing making the calls. The second part is making sure that everybody believes that they're the right calls for the team.
'Whatever he did in those camps, however he coaches, he got them to bite down on the things that he thought the team could achieve, and why the changes were right.
'It was brave. I don't think many people would have had the courage to do what he did ... but ultimately it proved to be a winning formula.'
Wild celebrations ensued as Queensland produced a dominant victory against New South Wales on Wednesday
The Maroons blasted their way to victory having taking a 20-0 lead at half-time before winning the game 24-12
There were emotional scenes after the game as the Maroons paid tribute in the changing rooms to Cameron Munster's dad Steven, who died over the weekend suddenly
Ikin was one of the faces of Queensland's most unlikely series win, as an 18-year-old in Paul Vautin's 1995 'Neville Nobodies' during the Super League war.
Queensland used that series as inspiration this year, watching highlights in camp, having '1995' written on their sleeves and shouting it out in defence late in Perth.
Ikin was chuffed that the 1995 group still provided motivation, labelling this year's win as 'brave' and among Queensland's most special.
Similarities have also been drawn with the 2020 success when the Maroons were decimated, labelled the state's worst team ever.
Queensland made a point to write their own history in recent weeks, having never before overcome a game-one loss at home with the last two matches on the road.
They were then shattered by the sudden passing of captain Cameron Munster's father on Sunday, before he returned to camp to lead the side and lift the shield.
'They're right up there (among the gutsiest series wins),' said Slater, who has now won three Origin series in four attempts as coach.
'It is a true Queensland team. It's been a true Queensland performance. That's no disrespect to anyone else, but you look over the history of this footy team.
Slater (left) has been lauded for his brave backs-to-the-wall coaching style, in guiding the maroons to victory
'I've been proud of this group a number of times over the last four years, and I don't know if I've been any more proud than (now).'
Afterwards, Maroons players admitted criticism in the lead-up to game two had spurred them on for the unlikely comeback.
'I don't know why everyone is comparing us with the (Neville Nobodies),' prop Lindsay Collins said.
'There was a lot of talk around this Origin, but we have so many stars in our team and so much belief.
'It was a bit hard to hear that criticism. It did add a little bit of fuel for us.'
Fellow front-rower Tino Fa'asuamaleaui said it also inspired him.
'We created history,' he said. 'They're not the only two years they ruled us out, they rule us out every year. To get the win again ... what are they going to say now?'