In my opinion, expansion clubs and rival teams are absolutely monitoring the Warriors closely right now. Success changes everything in professional sport. When a club is winning, developing players well, building depth, and creating stability, other organisations naturally begin looking at who may become available or squeezed out long term. The Warriors suddenly having multiple capable halves is not a weakness — it’s actually a sign the club is finally building properly.
Because of that, I wouldn’t be surprised if conversations have already quietly taken place between rival clubs and player managers regarding future opportunities. Expansion clubs linked to PNG and Perth especially would be doing their homework early. They cannot afford to wait until the market is dry before identifying spine players they may want to build around.
A player like Luke Metcalf becomes very attractive in that environment: What I don’t buy into is the idea that Metcalf himself is unhappy or carrying on emotionally. To me, this feels far more like standard player management and external noise than some sort of internal crisis. Managers are paid to explore the market, create leverage, and understand future opportunities for their clients. Public speculation often becomes part of that process, whether intentional or not. There’s probably also an element of pot stirring occurring because the Warriors are now viewed differently across the competition. For years, the club was criticised for lacking consistency and depth in key positions. Now they suddenly have genuine competition for jerseys and people are trying to turn that into a negative.
I also think there’s an important lesson sitting right in front of everyone through Tanah Boyd’s situation. Boyd understood where he sat within the squad, worked hard behind the scenes, stayed patient, and prepared himself for the opportunity when it came. When called upon, he looked ready for first grade and took his chance with the mindset that the jersey should only be taken off him through performance. That’s exactly the mentality successful clubs need internally. The reality is that elite teams rarely keep every talented player completely comfortable forever. Competition is healthy. The key is having clarity, honesty, and standards within the environment. Players improve when positions are earned rather than handed out.
From Metcalf’s perspective, he also has to weigh up whether another opportunity would genuinely place him in a better football situation than the one currently building at the Warriors. Right now the club offers: stability, strong support, finals potential, quality coaching, and an improving roster. These things matter.
Hopefully this situation settles down because, in my view, the Warriors having multiple quality halves competing for spots is a far better problem than the instability and lack of depth the club has battled through for years.