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    He will join the class of great Aussie forward imports who came looking for a new challenge and left as a club legend: Campion, Price, Luck. Testament to Webby's coaching that players coming and leaving under his tenure leave as better players. No longer are the days that coming to the wahs would kill your career. Now it can be the making of it.
     
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    The sauce came directly from @rugged, personally I think he was just trying to keep this thread ticking over.
    Have been a member since the old old site. If I was going to post crap for giggles i wouldnt have waited over a decade😬 Have been upfront that I don’t know the strength of my source only that they do have access to players and management and spent social time in the dressing room on Friday night.
    With each passing day looks like it was more smoke than fire but am hoping we may yet be pleasantly surprised.
     
    I actually rate Dutchie as a footy analyst - he knows his stuff, he just skews in a different direction sometimes.

    What I can’t stomach is suggesting Will does ‘fake news’ or is deliberately biased. Will has spent thousands of hours chronicling the club and NZ rugby league for next to no money, and at personal cost, because he’s a true believer. The club is lucky to have him. Taking cheap shots at him is pathetic.
     

    Mitch Barnett pays back Andrew Webster’s faith as leadership needed at Mt Smart​


    While the Warriors’ leadership stocks have taken hit after hit this NRL season, co-captain Mitch Barnett’s continued rise has kept the club on track through what could have been a problematic period.

    Since the end of the 2024 season, the Warriors’ leadership group has been heavily depleted.

    In August, club great Shaun Johnson announced he would retire, before Tohu Harris did the same at the start of 2025.

    Harris’ exit came after the departures of both Addin Fonua-Blake to the Cronulla Sharks and Marcelo Montoya to the Canterbury Bulldogs, before Dylan Walker was allowed to leave mid-season to join the Parramatta Eels.

    While their collective leadership was boosted by the arrival of Kiwis captain James Fisher-Harris, a pectoral injury means the 29-year-old will be sidelined for up to six weeks.

    What’s more, the loss of Fisher-Harris came in the wake of former Warriors captain Roger Tuivasa-Sheck suffering a hamstring injury, while former Kiwis captain Dallin Watene-Zelezniak is yet to play a minute this season after suffering a wrist injury in pre-season.

    In those absences, though, Barnett has only grown. After signing for the Warriors in 2023, the 31-year-old has gone from strength to strength in Auckland – firstly by becoming an NRL-leading prop, before last year returning maiden call-ups for both New South Wales and Australia.

    And after being named as the Simon Mannering medallist – the annual award for the Warriors’ best player – Barnett was elevated to co-captaincy permanently, after filling in for Harris last season.

    As a leader, Barnett falls into the “do as I do, not what I say” camp. His high standards and demands of himself are matched by an equally high workrate on the field.

    Even after Fisher-Harris limped from the field in the 42-14 defeat to the Melbourne Storm, the Warriors recorded back-to-back wins over the Brisbane Broncos and the Newcastle Knights.

    Because of that, as the team head to Brisbane for a Magic Round clash against the North Queensland Cowboys, they’re doing so as a top-four NRL side.

    For Andrew Webster, Barnett’s leadership and duty of care to his club and teammates is a feature of his game that he saw before he even became Warriors coach.

    1745966735377.webp

    And while Barnett proved last year that he’s more than capable of leading the Warriors, this year has seen him reach another level.

    “Mitch would be really satisfied with the difference in his leadership between this time and last year,” Webster explained.

    “Last year, it was all around ‘I’ll show you the way with my actions’. He still leads exactly the same way, but he’s very polished at talking to the group, calming them down, and he’s also good at bringing his peers in.

    “It’s quite funny, he got suspended for eight weeks when I coached against him at Penrith for hitting someone late. I couldn’t believe how aggressive he still is, but is so disciplined, calm and clear.

    “When I got the job, I started watching him closely. I couldn’t believe his work ethic and how hard he tried. I thought he was going to make a big impact.

    “When I rang him and spoke to him on the phone, I couldn’t believe how much he cared about the team, and how much of an impact he had. I thought that was leadership straight away.”

    Barnett isn’t alone in shouldering the leadership burden, either. Even with that host of names unavailable, hooker Wayde Egan and second-rower Kurt Capewell have also shone.

    That’s been vital, particularly in guiding arguably the most exciting core of young players the club has produced.

    Most importantly, though, Barnett has the faith of the players.

    Fisher-Harris’ arrival at the start of the year saw him instilled as an automatic choice to lead the Warriors, given his success both at test level with New Zealand and as a member of the Penrith Panthers’ premiership dynasty.

    However, as Webster explained, Barnett made himself impossible to not be handed more responsibility by the time a captain was named following Harris’ retirement.

    As a player, Chanel Harris-Tavita has been with the Warriors for the tenure of both Harris, and Tuivasa-Sheck, before he left the club in 2021.

    And yet it’s Barnett’s approach that resonates the strongest for his charges.

    “He’s a bit more vocal than Tohu,” said Harris-Tavita. “But he’s the same as Tohu in that he leads with his actions.

    “As much as he talks at training and in games, he’s always doing the little things that not many people want to do.

    “That’s why he has the respect of the whole team. Fish has been a big loss for us. But in the last few weeks, Barney has really progressed as a leader.

    “It’s similar to last year; we lost a few players, were down on troops but Barney really stepped up and led us through that tough time.

    “He’s doing the same thing now. It’s good that we’re getting results off the back of it.”

     
    Having just rewatched a couple of the cowboys games, they play a lot like Manly. They like to go sideways a lot during their own half and take advantage of their speed on the edges and through their ball running spine players. They are also in the bottom half for completion rates however: their high risk play makes them susceptible to a rushing, compressed defensive line like ours. If we get them into a grind, we can force a lot of errors out of them. Even in that Titans game, they turned over a lot of ball that a better side would have converted into a bigger lead than 18-12 at half time.

    it's also evident that their backline is both their greatest strength and greatest weakness. Jaxson Purdue and Derby are young talented speedsters who can finish tries from anywhere but they are also still learning the defensive game. They have had a couple of shockers this year- Olakuatu absolutely gave Purdue a bath in their first game of the year against Manly. If Leka is on that edge, Webby will know what to do. We already know about Vailea's weaknesses given his time here. He doesn't seem to have addressed those during his time at the cows. Bateman also isn't the same player he was at Canberra. He's now a poor man's Capewah with none of his defensive traits. The Vailea/Bateman edge has leaked quite a few pts also.

    One thing we should be careful of is their bench. They have started slow in many of their games, but they score a lot of their tries in the 30-50 minute mark of games when they bring on Neame/Hess. They've turned a lot of games for them this year. Gotta look to mitigate that impact, so Ford, Demi and Bunty have an important defensive job to do when they come on. If we can do that, we'll go a long way to winning this game.
     
    Nothing out of the ordinary. This team can do a job in the middle against the cows. Came across an interesting stat that we have the lowest number of tackles in our own 20 in the comp by far. We also have the highest number of tackles in the opposition 20 by far. If we repeat that trend for this game, we go a long way to shutting down the cows spine and winning this game.
     
    Not sure if seeing him on one news put him in your mind but great to see him further confirm that the group of him, Halasima, Vaimauga and Laban want to stay at the club long term. What a time to be a Warriors supporter
    Guru on the Bloke podcast made a comment about meeting them during Vegas. He mentioned how those young players in particular stick together and have formed a very close bond and how it reminded him of how tight players within the Penrith system were.
     

    Ford cranked up to 50 and travelling smoothly on Auckland journey​

    AuthorWill Evans
    NRL Reporter
    Mon 28 Apr 2025, 01:45 pm

    Warriors forward Jackson Ford is the type of unassuming workhorse who avoids blowing his own trumpet to almost a painful degree.

    But after a barnstorming maiden NRL double on top of his usual industrious efforts in the middle of the park, Ford' chest puffed out a little more when pressed about racking up his 50th game for the Warriors, after taking four seasons to accumulate 32 NRL appearances with the Dragons.

    It’s clear Ford views himself as a long-term clubman in a Warriors squad short on superstars but brimming with grit and spirit, as emphasised by their top-four standing and 5-2 record heading into a Magic Round showdown with the Cowboys.

    “It’s come up so quick to be honest, to think that I've come from the Dragons and now I've already hit up 50 for the Warriors – it’s just pretty good just to look back on," Ford said after the 26-12 ANZAC Day win over the Knights.

    “I was coming over here for an opportunity, not even sure if I was going to play NRL, but to get 50 games that quick is pretty good achievement and I’m feeling at home in New Zealand as well.

    “I [recently] got engaged to my partner (Victoria) and we’re set up well. We've got a house over here now, so we're settled in Auckland.”

    Warriors co-captain Mitch Barnett was effusive in his praise after another big night in the front-row trenches with Ford.

    Warriors v Knights – Round 8, 2025


    “[He’s] someone that doesn’t complain about nothing when you put him out on the field,” Barnett said.

    “He’s always going to turn up, doesn’t ask to come off and he’s that bloke you can count on. For us I’m just grateful we’ve got him in the team, firstly, but I’m really happy with how he’s going.”

    A breakout player in the second row in 23 starting appearances during the Warriors’ unforgettable top-four charge in 2023 after arriving as an unheralded recruit from St George Illawarra, Ford endured a difficult follow-up season last year.


    Moved from the second row to prop briefly mid-season, Ford dropped to the interchange and then ultimately out of the 17 for the Warriors’ last five games.

    All Tries –  Warriors v Knights


    Ford’s inclusion for the Round 1 trip to Las Vegas in March surprised some but he has become an integral member of the Warriors’ pack again – with the rangy customer now exclusively regarded as a middle forward.

    “At the start of pre-season, Webby told me he wants me to be in the middle this year, so I had a good pre-season there,” Ford told NRL.com.

    “I’m just really trying to work on my connections with my middles and trying to keep laying those platforms where we want to get to on attack and find those spots.

    “He's just seen some potential for some big minutes there. The game's getting so fast now and he thinks I've got a good motor, so just he wants to me get in there and do as many tackles, as many runs as I can and then get me off.”

    Ford’s importance to the Warriors’ engine-room cause has only increased following Tohu Harris’ retirement, Dylan Walker’s early-season transfer to Parramatta and a recent injury to James Fisher-Harris.

    Playing big minutes as a starting prop or from the interchange, Ford is averaging 33 tackles and 136 metres per game, as well as racking up 22 tackle-breaks in seven games. A rapid brace of tries soon after entering the fray against the Knights was just reward for his diligence.

    “It hurts that we’ve had few good of our 13s that have left, but the young boys like ‘Dimmy’ (Demetric Vaimauga) and having Erin (Clark) come in as well, they're really good for our team to get those combinations going in the middle there,” Ford continued.

    "I'm feeling good. Last year I had a few little niggles, so I’m just trying to stay healthy, stay fit, and just keep stacking up those games.”

     
    Berry has been injured for almost a year, played a few NSW cup games where he was clearly too good for, and so far has had 2 games (one against the Storm) with a one game break in the middle of the 2 games. Also has a new combo in Leka, Metcalf and Tuaupiki the players around him.

    Imo give him 5 games in a row in FG, with the same combos and see how he goes before we start talking of dropping him for Pompey.

    Despite missing a bunch of tackles on the weekend, there were no tries scored on his edge, so there's plenty of upside for Berry at the moment.

    Also, I just wanna check that those asking him to be dropped are the same ones who were giving Ford and Capewah shit and saying they should be dropped. Weve all seen how those boys have turned that around. I would argue that out of those 3 Berry has the most upside, so there's every chance that once he gets back into the groove on first grade we'll see some quality mahi from Berry
     
    he's da man - the BBas (Bunty Brigade appreciation society) has spoken, what other club has such a low level player exceeding expectations!
    It's actually the Big Bunty Appreciation Society thank you.
    He's building into his prime prop years and yes he's added some late footwork to his game (even made a half break against the Knights which we haven't seen in a while)
    The plan with Bunty is ultra long term. A One-club legend with many generations of Afoas eventually donning the Warriors jumper.
    And the best part is he's so chill for someone who knows he could tear your arms clean off your body if he wanted.
    We need to keep good people like Bunty around the club.
     
    Gannons a bit of a project player for me. I see him being eased in next year with more of a bigger role when Niukore and Capewell likely finish in 2026.

    I like Bunty as a fringe first grader and NSW cup prop, but it depends on how TSS and Ale go over the course of the season whether I would resign him. I would think we’d have capacity to re-sign him given releasing Zyon and we’ll need proper depth considering the age of our current stocks.
    Anyone else noticed Buntys footwork at the line now? He’s a valuable squad player who goes about his business without fuss and won’t let you down.
     
    He averaged 48 mins in Cup before his recall once Walker gapped it.
    Webster has only played him for more than 40 mins of 4 occassions out of the 34 games he's coached him.
    Minimum contract going forward, which I can understand if he'd decline
    Afoa is a very good depth player that doesn't cost a lot. I think he is a no frills, solid player we need that balances the cap, experience and depth. Virtually zero risk re-signing him
     
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