Post Match Canberra Raiders v NZ Warriors - [Round 2, 2026]

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    Votes: 128 86.5%
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I never expect a win but if your not 77-6 or some such, your doing ok. I'd take 18-16 but this year I think we can actually win.

Broncos bet the Storm once in the regular season and went on to win the big one.

I'd be happy going into finals, if we beat them at least once this year.

If you wanna be the big dog, you gotta be able to beat the big dogs.

EDIT: I'm an idiot, we only play them once in the regular season so it's a must win.
 
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what a reality we are living in when Jacko has double the dally M points of Nathan Cleary! Could we have two NSW SOO players this year? Even if he isn't in the start on side or bench, he certainly deserves at least a position in the extended squad based on current form.
 
Our depth in basically all our positions is nasty good.

There's still ALOT of footy to play, but we are positioned incredibly well for a decent run.

April 11 will be a telling game, for us. (Storm @ Melbourne).
The game the week before will also be a good litmus test: Sharks in Cronulla. Those two games away from home in Cronulla and Melbourne could define our season.
 
what a reality we are living in when Jacko has double the dally M points of Nathan Cleary! Could we have two NSW SOO players this year? Even if he isn't in the start on side or bench, he certainly deserves at least a position in the extended squad based on current form.

If he keeps playing like this, I'd be VERY surprised to not see him in the blue jumper.

I'm just so stoked for him. He's such a hard working player and is finally getting to that form that the club backed him to be in.
 
they just need to keep going down to Ali's side and they will score every time just like they did in round 6 last year at Aami Park. Even in the Raiders game, he had crucial one-on-one misses on Sasagi that led to big line breaks that we were lucky to control due to great scramble. Storm will crucify us if we don't fix that. And I'm so sick of losing to those pricks. I want this year to be the year we end the curse.
Wasn’t that Pompey on the left hand side that missed Sasagi?
 
What really impressed me the most with the performance. Was the lads fighting hard in tough circumstances throughout the game. Losing Capewell in the Warm up.And CHT for the whole game. We didn’t drop our heads against a very good quality Raiders team. Our defence was incredible! The scoreboard is awesome and all. But I am looking for effort areas! Shoutout to Jackson Ford and Tanah Boyd!! Happy to be proven wrong! And hope they continue the consistency!
 
An opposition’s perspective

Met a Raiders fan at MSS on Friday. The thing that was interesting is how they don't actually think they have a big pack and that the strength of their game is really about mobility and speed rather than power. Just like we get frustrated at Aussies who perpetuate the 20 year old myth of us being this monster forward pack, maybe we are somewhat guilty of doing the same thing with the Raiders. Quick research into the Raiders forwards supports this: they don't have many hulking 6'4 120kg monsters in their pack. Like us, they are all very mid sized: 6 foot 106-108kg range. Definitely nowhere near the heaviest pack in the game which is probably Cronulla or Brisbane.
 
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My three word summaries to my missus of the Warriors games for the past two week have been the same: "We battered them."

Our forwards, led ferociously by Fisher-Harris, have put the opposition packs through the mincer over the full 80 minutes of the contest. We have been resilient and adaptable in the face of adversity and our opponents couldn't cope.

I love how our young crop are coming through and dominating. It reminds me a little of the Golden Generation of Manchester United who came through into a team of experienced heads and made them more dangerous. Considering we had big Marata, Gannon and EIT in reserve grade and were without Barney and Capewell our forward depth is top quality.

I won't repeat all of the compliments paid to our players as you have all covered it so well but to say I agree.

Lastly, I liked the comments that RTS and Webster made about the team. Roger noted that after attempting unsuccessfully to go around the Raiders, the team collectively decided the winning of the game was through the middle. They adapted and destroyed them up fat mans alley. Webster mentioned their calm as an attribute that pleased him. Their decision making under pressure and fatigue was generally excellent and I think their obvious superior fitness is helping in this regard.

Newcastle without Ponga and Brown are significantly less dangerous so I am confident in the result for next week. I think the keys for a Warriors victory will be if we can maintain our discipline around the ruck, if our forward pack can dominate theirs and if we support Boyd's kicking game with excellence in kick chase, competing for high balls and savage defence when they are bringing the balls out in kick-return carries and subsequent tackles in their territory.

The other key is continuing to improve our defence, I thought against Canberra our defence was some of the best I have seen from the Warriors in a long time. Hopefully with a full weeks preparation with the players selected our defensive organisation can improve further. Our scramble was superb and I think this is testament to the attitude that Webster has grown in this team.
 
My three word summaries to my missus of the Warriors games for the past two week have been the same: "We battered them."

Our forwards, led ferociously by Fisher-Harris, have put the opposition packs through the mincer over the full 80 minutes of the contest. We have been resilient and adaptable in the face of adversity and our opponents couldn't cope.

I love how our young crop are coming through and dominating. It reminds me a little of the Golden Generation of Manchester United who came through into a team of experienced heads and made them more dangerous. Considering we had big Marata, Gannon and EIT in reserve grade and were without Barney and Capewell our forward depth is top quality.

I won't repeat all of the compliments paid to our players as you have all covered it so well but to say I agree.

Lastly, I liked the comments that RTS and Webster made about the team. Roger noted that after attempting unsuccessfully to go around the Raiders, the team collectively decided the winning of the game was through the middle. They adapted and destroyed them up fat mans alley. Webster mentioned their calm as an attribute that pleased him. Their decision making under pressure and fatigue was generally excellent and I think their obvious superior fitness is helping in this regard.

Newcastle without Ponga and Brown are significantly less dangerous so I am confident in the result for next week. I think the keys for a Warriors victory will be if we can maintain our discipline around the ruck, if our forward pack can dominate theirs and if we support Boyd's kicking game with excellence in kick chase, competing for high balls and savage defence when they are bringing the balls out in kick-return carries and subsequent tackles in their territory.

The other key is continuing to improve our defence, I thought against Canberra our defence was some of the best I have seen from the Warriors in a long time. Hopefully with a full weeks preparation with the players selected our defensive organisation can improve further. Our scramble was superb and I think this is testament to the attitude that Webster has grown in this team.
I rewatched the game yesterday and you are spot on. We battered them:

1 - we weren’t perfect. Sloppy sometimes, particularly in the first half.
2 - as you say we physically battered them in the second half. We hit hard and stuck. Wave after wave super fast, up in their face.
3 - some have said that was one of the best Warriors games ever. First half was good, second half was truely epic. That half was played at a representative level / intensity by us while the Raiders were still in early season, warming into the year.
4 - that second half we mentally and physically stepped it up off the back of superior fitness and intensity. We were able to step it up a gear on demand as a unit and the Raiders were blow away. This is gold for a coach.
5 - I think we targeted these first two games and went above and beyond early season expectation. It’s not sustainable. I fully expect us to ease up but have the ability at half time (or in the final 20) to say let’s blow teams away. This is what the best teams can do.
6 - we’re physically super fit, well coached and are able to focus collectively with an intensity when required. This is very exciting.
7 - this is true next man up where the teams so consistent and well drilled as a unit that everyone coming in looks like a superstar - eg Boyd. We have the best forward pack in the competition to control games.
8 - this is very Storm/ Panthers like. Able to step up collectively when required. Sometimes loosing to middling teams but will fire up for key opponents and come finals time. That level isn’t sustainable all the time.
9 - yes, ‘come finals time’. Lock it in. There’s no way we’re real title contender this year 🎉


Ps the Panthers and Storm game will be origin/ international intensity!
 
4) Interesting factoid for those who are nerdy like me. Boyd signs autographs with his left hand but is right footed. People who are left handed are more intelligent and more creative and quite often ambidextrous with talents like Boyd ie right footed kicker.
Me too although not too sure about the intelligent thingie.

Interesting in Cricket Wrighty, I played right handed and the coach made me have a twisted grip on the bat especially driving as the left hand was more dominant and skewed the bat if i didn't correct
 
On the offloads thing, It is in the dna of the NZ game to pop a ball. You saw what that looks like when a coach embraces it fully in the Daniel Anderson Jungle ball era.

The reason we moved away from it is that the game changed. It sped up in some areas and it slowed down in others (the emphasis on ptb speed, winning the ruck vs the wrestle to slow it down).

The war for the ruck became (and still is) everything. Coaches became obsessed with completions, playing the perfect sets of six tackles. This became increasingly a science with very restrictive outcomes for our type of player, the compulsive off loader.

The only teams these days that use offloads effectively as a way to win Premierships (dry balls warning incoming) are teams that have earned the right.

And the same teams mitigate the risks of offloading by defending the occasional turn over when it happens.

Lastly, second phase initiated by forwards (usually the case because they can stand in the tackle and get arms free) relies on backs who have an instinct for reacting to impulsive moments in games (people like Stacey Jones, Sione Faumuina, Clinton Toopi, that can pluck a loose ball at their bootlaces and transition from stationary to attack in fluid so called [by Ray Warren watching the Warriors] "Calypso Rugby league"

Tis interesting that our backline has for years been reliant on two fullbacks (RTS CNK) that are not support running fullbacks, they do not sniff around the ruck for popped balls like Walsh and other NRL players.

They are a factor but you can't blame them for the lack of offloads exclusively, because when the Warriors ran Walker and Harris as a combo, Tevanga too, the second phase was encouraged from those specific players as a transition from Starting line up to bench impact.

This year is different though, Webster told them to throw it around in our last game of the season the year before, and he has continued in that approach this season with great success.

The difference in team make up that defines this new era of ball movement (as I say Webster threw out the rule book vs the Panthers - and clearly the coaches have had long discussions about where the Warriors attack lacks, and why it looked promising in that one final against the best of the best) I digress as I was saying, the difference in the team make up is that we are in the era of Tanah Boyd.

People talk about platforms in Rugby league, the forwards lay the platform and the halfback creates a platform, while two different things, they both refer to the fundamental physics that make up the laws of the Rugby league universe.

When Metcalf returns, we get a player that is of the instinctive type (call it quantum physics of league) Metcalf is the Jungle baller I was harking back to, he would have slotted into the 2002 Warriors beautifully, now that guy can read a popped ball off a forward and Go....

And since we are playing some Jungle ball now (Tanah gives Webster the platform to risk the offloads) it is a very exciting time for the Warriors.
 
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A lot of impressive states from the weekend. One that slipped by me as I was watching and waiting for the win to be secured. As 12-6 even 18-6 with the time remaining there was a chance they'd come back. The try after that secured it. The late ones were icing on the cake.

They scored first. Down 0-6 then we score 40 unanswered points.
 
It was funny watching the game with people wearing the lime green V ponchos.

It looked like there was a good Raiders supporter base at the game.
 
NRL
NZ
Warriors Warriors
40 - 6
Canberra
Raiders Raiders
📍 Go Media 📡 Warriors Live
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Team Logo
7.1
NZ
Team Ave Team Average
Jackson Ford
9.1
Jackson Ford
Highest Best Performance
Chanel Harris-Tavita
4.8
Chanel Harris-Tavita
Lowest Needs Improvement
TEAM LIST
Charnze Nicoll-Klokstad 1
6.7 (38)
Dallin Watene-Zelezniak 2
6.9 (38)
Ali Leiataua 3
Right Centre
6.3 (38)
Adam Pompey 4
Left Centre
5.9 (38)
Roger Tuivasa-Sheck 5
Left Wing 150th Club Game
6.4 (38)
Chanel Harris-Tavita 6
4.8 (38)
Tanah Boyd 7
Halfback
8.6 (38)
James Fisher-Harris 8
Right Prop Captain
7.7 (38)
Wayde Egan 9
7.1 (38)
Jackson Ford 10
Left Prop
9.1 (38)
Jacob Laban 12
Right Second Row
7.0 (38)
Leka Halasima 16
Left Second Row
8.4 (38)
Erin Clark 13
7.8 (38)
Sam Healey 14
Interchange
6.6 (38)
Demitric Vaimauga 15
6.6 (38)
Morgan Gannon 20
Interchange DNP
Tanner Stowers-Smith 17
7.5 (38)
Taine Tuaupiki 18
Interchange
8.0 (38)
Eddie Ieremia-Toeava 23
Interchange DNP
COACH
Andrew Webster HC
Andrew Webster
Head Coach
8.7 (38)
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