General WARRIORS Random Thread

Warriors Random Thread

This thread is for Warriors news, articles, pics etc that may not have an appropriate or suitable thread. A thread maybe made from your post or moved to the correct thread by admin.
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“They may take our site, but they'll never take our Wahs!”

 
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NZWarriors.com

Just been talking to a guy who has worked out at Auckland Airport for over thirty years. He's seen hundreds of sports teams go through the airport and he says, even after a loss, he hasn't seen a team that seems to enjoy being together as much as the current Warriors team since the early 2000's Anderson coached sides.
 
Warriors make the least in the NRL? And last year was reported as a financial bumper year for the team with sold out grounds, etc.

We need to introduce more jersey’s and get the sales up!
Jersey sales, memberships and gate takings are not where its at. It's sponsors. One could rock up and invest more money than those 3 things put together. Add in a few of them and you can see where the real money is.

Sponsors, advertisers, business and financial partners. This where population and popularity combine to give regions like Brisbane an advantage over most clubs. Broncos also have an exclusive club called the Thoroughbreds who are rich people given access to players where secret deals and dodgy one sided bets are placed over rounds of golf. Broncos also regularly sell enough season passes a year to sell out Mt Smart every game. Can't be forgetting their awesome club rooms, sponsorship deals from an international car maker, casino chain and brewery. Our sponsors back pockets pail into comparison.

A club like the Roosters while languishing at the bottom with us are far from broke because they have Saint Nick who has setup foundations to ensure the financial viability of the club long after he has passed. That use to Eric Watson in his early days but he then ran the club off the smell of an oily rag after that. The new owners look to be putting a lot of investment into the club particularly in junior development but they don't have the wallets of Uncle Nick.

Warriors are between a rock and a hard place. While the game day experience is extremely popular we lack a facility that can bring people in outside of that and we will almost never be able to enjoy the vast losings gathered by most Aussie clubs from pokie machines. Having a bar is a step in the right direction but that could also be a white elephant that the Auckland Warriors of old know only too well after a failed series of official bars went belly up in the early days. We should all be extremely grateful that Vodafone/One NZ have stuck around so long and invested so much into the club. It's not easy getting sponsorship but if there was ever a time for the club to capitalise it would be right now...
 
I work for Emerson’s brewery in Dunedin. Today we caned 20’000 cans of lion red with a special Warriors themed Label.

We normally only do our own beers but we are owned by Lion and they asked us to do. We were happy as to do it. Three diehard Warriors fans on the packaging crew. I ran the can line the other two packed and stacked the cans.
It’s a one off they are I believe being sold at the home Broncos game. I have a photo I tried to upload but the file was to large
 
The One New Zealand Warriors have been ranked among the country’s fastest growing businesses – and the only sporting organisation – in this year’s Deloitte Fast 50.

Established to celebrate Kiwi businesses pushing the limits, breaking records and redefining fast growth, the Fast 50 index is determined by revenue growth percentage over the last three years, the Warriors emerging from the Covid area to post an increase of 145 per cent over the period.

It ranks the club 36th on a list featuring strong representation from organisations in the services, construction, technology and retail industries.

The result reflects a growth surge since returning home from three seasons in isolation in Australia, culminating in the Warriors creating history this year as the first club in NRL history to sell out every home game in a season.

“The growth this year’s Fast 50 businesses have achieved over the past three years is a tribute to their agility, innovation and self-belief,” said Deloitte private partner and Fast 50 lead James Arlidge.

“The variety of industries in the index this year also reflects the depth and breadth of the entrepreneurial talent we have here in Aotearoa.”

As well as 13 sold-out games in New Zealand this year and eight last season, the One New Zealand Warriors pre-sold all their hospitality options before the 2024 campaign and achieved exponential growth in sponsorship, membership and merchandise revenue.

“We’re thrilled to be ranked alongside so many impressive organisations in the Deloitte Fast 50, and even more so because we’re the sole representative to be ranked from the sporting industry and proudly wholly New Zealand-owned,” said One New Zealand Warriors CEO Cameron George.

“It’s great recognition and a tribute to so many people in our club who have made this possible.”

The One New Zealand Warriors set new attendance records during their 30th season in the competition in 2024, topping even the numbers achieved in the club’s 1995 debut campaign.

The aggregate crowd figure for all 12 regular season home games including the Magic Round clash against Penrith in Brisbane totalled 295,302.

That number topped the tally of 290,946 in 1995 – when the then-named Ericsson Stadium had a bigger capacity of more than 30,000 – and it was also well clear of 272,220 for the club’s 12 home games last year.

This season the One New Zealand Warriors averaged 24,608 for their 12 home games, up from 22,685 last season.

The combined total of home and away crowds topped half a million for just the second time in the club’s history, up to 512,218 from last year’s 506,439. The previous best was 1995’s 495,624.
 
WARRIORS

Return: Staggered from November 5 to early January

The first crop of players will report for training on November 5, and will include Jett Cleary, Motu Pasikala, Jason Salalilo and Makaia Tafua and Jake Thompson. Code converts Caelyse-Paul Putoko and Harry Inch will also join the group.

Senior players like Dallin Watene-Zelezniak will start pre-season on November 20, with the grand final winning NSW Cup players to arrive on November 26.

Representative stars, including James Fisher-Harris and Roger Tuivasa-Sheck, aren’t due back late December. Players will break for Christmas on December 20 to January 5.

Star signing and former Titans flyer Alofiana Khan-Pereira will join the group mid-November.

 
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