Highlighted posts

    Harry Inch signs with Warriors
    Looks like reguardless we won't be hearing much as he goes on his honeymoon for a while (just wanna nip in the bud any rumors that he is flying to aus to talk to other clubs). View attachment 14742

    I mean, it would be a MASSIVE dick move if he's planning on leaving, to go on holiday with his Wahs kit and boots (surely to continue running/rehabbing) to come back and announce he's leaving us. I'm sure it's not the case.

    These next three years are quite important for us - not only do we have a good chance at going deep into the finals, it also bridges the gap between now and when our exciting half prospects come through.

    Even if its costing us 200k more a year than we want it to, that's far and away a better outcome (to be paying overs for a good player) as opposed to having money, but no one to spend it on and not having a marquee half.

    If we were to be fortunate with injuries over the next few years, and don't have key players like Metcalf, Barney and Rocco missing huge chunks of the year I think we're doing better than 6th moving forward.

    What a time to be alive!
     
    I posted a couple weeks asking questions around Hansen leaving. Hansen's partner worked as a teacher aide with my wife. The school farewelled Hansen's partner at the end of last term as she was moving back to Aussie to "set up their home". I am not sure where in Aussie that was. My wife told me Luke staying here in NZ until April, but that April doesn't make sense to me as that is near the start of the season. I know for his fact his partner has gone back. I was asking if there was any news around him, but haven't heard anything.
     
    Jett Cleary is our most loyal Ozzy half (He is the one who we have the best chance of keeping). When developing halves we simply must aim for at least one marquee Kiwi half. Otherwise we will forever be experiencing this, its too hard to hold onto star Ozzy halves, the pull back to Australia, money, market, sponsorships, lifestyle and family is too enticing.

    Born in Auckland.

    Kiwi passport....

    I'm thinking there is some magical scenario that Ivan comes as a coaching director to Webby, wins a comp with Jett at 7, Ivan will also be named coach of the Kiwis to who Jett will play for and they will win the World Cup.

    Save this post.
     
    Looks like the Crusaders are getting salty lol

    Kinda cool how this dude can't bring himself to name our sport in 2025 he still employs that snobbish elitist attitude calling it 'that other code'.

    And that is why your sport is dying, because you can't open your mind to a world of different flavors, and thereby your youth culture cannot relate to you anymore.
     
    So all the talk about Metcalf early release is based on a poster from another forum saying he hopes the Dragons get him, and then saying he hopes that he gets an early release due to the warriors 'strength' in the halves. OK.

    Everyone is regurgitating what that guy on the bye round podcast said. A few podcasts/videos/tiktoks have been created off that, and then posters saying they heard it from this other new source too. lol

    Long offseason incoming.
     
    Have to politely disagree sir. While both were decent, they've gone to another level. Barnett one of the first picked for Origin this year, and Kangaroos when earlier I don't think he had ever been considered. Same as Clark - we bought the best lock in the game this year, likely for interchange player money. They've gone another level. Although Barney I think got an extension, probably at a higher rate.

    Also, I was looking at AKP's stats, and while they're pretty bad (2.0 missed a game), the standard for most wingers look to be 0.8-1.5 missed tackles, with Roger exceptional at 0.6 missed tackles a game. He only needs to improve a small amount to come back to the middle of the pack, he's never gunna be the top defender but hopefully he can get to around where most wingers are, with the huge upside of being a fast try scorer
    When Barney came over to us, people forget that he was massively damaged goods. He had a reputation as a bit of a loose cannon who spent more time on the sidelines than actually on the field. A bit like Mad Jack who Newcastle eventually signed as well. Webby turned him into the middle who now effectively has a lock on a starting position in NSW origin and is the spiritual leader of our club. If he stayed at Newcastle, I've got no doubt he'd be finishing up now in super league given the way that club has deteriorated. If ever there was an example of the webby effect, it's Barney.
     
    I really don't think we're getting an unexpected return from Barnett or Clark. Barnett was a quality footballer already (especially after maturing a bit), he just wasn't on people's radar much over this side of the Tasman. I was ecstatic when we signed him. Clark had been playing great football and the Titans too. Another I was stoked to sign.

    Ford is more the Webby product to me.

    I have to admit that I have low expectations of AKP. I just don't see it really. We're so x-factor starved that we can't see the deficiencies clearly in my opinion. This is one I really do hope I've underestimated though. I'm pretty keen to see Mellars and Linnane, and optimistic about what Norris might do next year.

    Have to politely disagree sir. While both were decent, they've gone to another level. Barnett one of the first picked for Origin this year, and Kangaroos when earlier I don't think he had ever been considered. Same as Clark - we bought the best lock in the game this year, likely for interchange player money. They've gone another level. Although Barney I think got an extension, probably at a higher rate.

    Also, I was looking at AKP's stats, and while they're pretty bad (2.0 missed a game), the standard for most wingers look to be 0.8-1.5 missed tackles, with Roger exceptional at 0.6 missed tackles a game. He only needs to improve a small amount to come back to the middle of the pack, he's never gunna be the top defender but hopefully he can get to around where most wingers are, with the huge upside of being a fast try scorer
     

    Bishop Neal: The Christchurch teen chasing his Warriors NRL dream​

    NZ Herald
    13 Oct, 2025 07:31 PM7 mins to read


    League sensation Bishop Neal with mother Betsy Neal and father Trevor Neal.

    League sensation Bishop Neal with mother Betsy Neal and father Trevor Neal.
    Bishop Neal is one of rugby league’s most exciting prospects. His athleticism, skills and demeanour led to him being chosen for the Warriors Under-17 side who were back-to-back winners in one of the NRL’s most important pathway competitions. Jordan Smith reports on what the journey looked like from the beginning....
    I knew up-and-coming rugby league player Bishop Neal stood at 194cm and weighed 113 kg.
    But arriving at the Neal family home, it was staggering to see how much he dominated the space inside the doorframes.
    It made it even harder to believe he had only turned 17 in May.
    After an hour-long interview with the young man and his family however, it became clear natural ability and size were only one part of the picture. His accomplishments have been earned through hard work and a lifelong love of the game.


    “I’ve always loved footy. I used to always sleep with a rugby ball in my hand – that was my teddy,” Bishop Neal says.
    His mum Betsy Neal said little Bishop would keep a journal detailing his future plans.
    “He would write in his little journals that ‘I want to be a rugby player’ and about what he would do on the field,” she says.

    Dad Trevor Neal describes his son constantly repeating the “B for ball” page in his alphabet book.
    “He’d be just standing there when I’m coming home from work in the nappy just going ‘ball’,” he says.

    That love for the game only grew with age. Betsy Neal would record his junior club games so he could watch and analyse them – a habit that’s akin to much older players.
    “He would watch it all week over and over again. He’d come up to us saying ‘if I stepped off my right foot, I could’ve done that’. He does that every single game he plays,” Betsy Neal says.
    “I just thought it was normal,” she says.

    Like any kid, Neal’s involvement in league came from the pure enjoyment it provided.
    The first time he came to people’s attention was after playing in a weekend-long Under-15s Kotahitanga league tournament at 14, where he was mostly there to support a friend who was feeling nervous about taking part.
    Straight afterwards, Trevor and Betsy Neal began to field calls left and right. Bishop’s St Thomas of Canterbury principal Steve Hart called to say: “’I don’t know what happened this weekend at the tournament but everyone’s calling me about Bishop’.”

    Approaches were coming thick and fast from NRL clubs and their agents.
    Attention like this can be difficult for youngsters, particularly in the age of social media.

    But this hasn’t been a problem for Neal and his siblings, who face a blanket rule of no cellphones and no social media until they turn 18.
    Betsy Neal says social media is “an awesome tool”, but didn’t want to see it dilute the effort her son or any of their children gave in their passions, with Trevor Neal adding it allowed them to develop “a stronger sense of identity” by avoiding the noise social media creates.
    While he remains off social media, an exception has been made for Neal when it comes to a phone, due to spending time training in Auckland.
    “It was just hard not having a phone. They [the Warriors] had to message the house parent I was staying with to tell me stuff and then I had to tell him to tell them,” Neal says.
    Back in Christchurch, St Thomas’ league coach and deputy principal Andrew Auimatagi first met Neal at 14. He describes the second-rower as supremely gifted physically, but also emotionally mature beyond his years in a way he’s never seen before.
    “Even in those tense moments, you won’t see Bishop rattled. He’s quite consistent with his emotions; I don’t think we’ve ever seen him flip out so I think that’s a real superpower of his.”
    Being the player everybody wants in their side has created a seemingly exhausting schedule at times, spanning both rugby league and union.
    “It didn’t feel like it was heaps to me. [Like] Mum and Dad, said I love being active, so I like being at training,” Neal says.

    Betsy Neal even says training would be used as a disciplining tool and if he didn’t clean his room, he wouldn’t be able to go.
    “Within two minutes, the room was clean, so he’s always been good like that.”
    The raw talent combined with a staggering work ethic meant it was merely a matter of when, not if, the Warriors reached out.
    As well as it being Neal’s life-long dream to wear the Warriors jersey, club CEO and general manager Cameron George’s promise of a spot in the U17 Harold Matthews side sealed the deal, amidst Australian clubs flying the Neal’s out for weeklong visits.
    “Other clubs didn’t have an Under-17 team so would’ve gone over [to Australia], played school footy or something else. So, I thought ‘that’d be mean playing Under-17s in the Warriors kit and all that’”, Neal says.
    Even before signing with the club, he was invited by George to train with the S.G. Ball (U19) side for two weeks in the summer of 2022-2023, at only 14.
    The following summer expanded on that experience and had him stationed in Auckland for three months, training with the first-grade side.
    That continued the over last summer and was coupled with the entire U17 Harold Matthews campaign, ending in May this year.

    Training alongside idols he used to watch on repeat is a feeling Neal describes as “buzzy as”, and while it’s now slightly easier, spending time with Roger Tuivasa-Sheck still catches him out.
    “He was the main dude I would watch before my games. [Now] walking with him to the field, I’ll be talking to him and then I would just be like, ‘damn, it’s Roger’.” Through those summers, Warriors head of junior pathways Tony Iro got to understand Neal on and off the field, noting the step up to professional footy is “brutal”.
    “From a physical perspective, he’s got everything that an NRL player needs but that’s probably only half of what is required to continue playing at that level,” Iro says.
    “Bishop’s a talented footballer but you need more than that to progress. You need to be able to work hard. You need to show some toughness.”
    Even at 15, Iro described Neal as a natural leader that boys are “prepared to follow” and believes he certainly has the tools and the drive to reach his goals.
    That drive for Neal comes back to the sacrifices his parents have made and continue to make in supporting him.
    “My parents are the best,” he says.
    “It sounds so cliché but taking me to all my trainings and everything ... probably don’t thank them enough.”
    As well emphasising strong family and friends connections, Neal says he’s a devout Christian and has a passion for music, having produced six songs with his schoolmates, including Warriors teammate Lennox Tuiloma.
    Having those off-field interests was emphasised by legendary coach Wayne Bennett.
    He said it was important for the youngster “to still be a kid”, as the professional environment happens fast, Betsy Neal says, recounting a conversation she had with Bennett.
    It’s clear Neal is hardwired for one thing however – making his footy dreams come true.
    “It’s just the way I am and the way I think – I’m gonna make my Plan A work.”
    “If the footy pops off, that’s awesome, but whether he does or not, he’s going to be a solid-as dude,” Trevor Neal adds.
    Looking forward, the moving boxes piled up in the Neal house show a family that’s committed to supporting their youngest in his professional journey and ready to make the move from Christchurch to their new home in Auckland.
    “It’s just cool seeing a kid doing what they love,” Betsy Neal says.
    “As a parent, that’s my baby still running around, except now he’s not doing it in the hallways and in the backyard. He’s doing [it] on the field, in the Warriors’ colours.”
    The most exciting things for me on this is that he really wants to be at the club and has an dialled in mindset and commitment to growth, not just a big kid playing against smaller ones.
     
    I expect AKP to get a lot of work under the high ball in the off season. If he can't take them, he won't be in first grade.

    17th, 14th, 14th have been the Titans defensive rank for points scored the last 3 years. That's not because of one winger and if anything wingers and centres cop the short end of the stick trying to cover up for breakdowns in the middle. We'll see how he looks in our D line.

    His upside makes him well worth the punt. A different environment, a different club, structure etc. Maybe it's fools gold, but he wouldn't be the first player given up on who finds a new lease on life at a different club either.
     

    Bishop Neal: The Christchurch teen chasing his Warriors NRL dream​

    NZ Herald
    13 Oct, 2025 07:31 PM7 mins to read


    League sensation Bishop Neal with mother Betsy Neal and father Trevor Neal.

    League sensation Bishop Neal with mother Betsy Neal and father Trevor Neal.
    Bishop Neal is one of rugby league’s most exciting prospects. His athleticism, skills and demeanour led to him being chosen for the Warriors Under-17 side who were back-to-back winners in one of the NRL’s most important pathway competitions. Jordan Smith reports on what the journey looked like from the beginning....
    I knew up-and-coming rugby league player Bishop Neal stood at 194cm and weighed 113 kg.
    But arriving at the Neal family home, it was staggering to see how much he dominated the space inside the doorframes.
    It made it even harder to believe he had only turned 17 in May.
    After an hour-long interview with the young man and his family however, it became clear natural ability and size were only one part of the picture. His accomplishments have been earned through hard work and a lifelong love of the game.


    “I’ve always loved footy. I used to always sleep with a rugby ball in my hand – that was my teddy,” Bishop Neal says.
    His mum Betsy Neal said little Bishop would keep a journal detailing his future plans.
    “He would write in his little journals that ‘I want to be a rugby player’ and about what he would do on the field,” she says.

    Dad Trevor Neal describes his son constantly repeating the “B for ball” page in his alphabet book.
    “He’d be just standing there when I’m coming home from work in the nappy just going ‘ball’,” he says.

    That love for the game only grew with age. Betsy Neal would record his junior club games so he could watch and analyse them – a habit that’s akin to much older players.
    “He would watch it all week over and over again. He’d come up to us saying ‘if I stepped off my right foot, I could’ve done that’. He does that every single game he plays,” Betsy Neal says.
    “I just thought it was normal,” she says.

    Like any kid, Neal’s involvement in league came from the pure enjoyment it provided.
    The first time he came to people’s attention was after playing in a weekend-long Under-15s Kotahitanga league tournament at 14, where he was mostly there to support a friend who was feeling nervous about taking part.
    Straight afterwards, Trevor and Betsy Neal began to field calls left and right. Bishop’s St Thomas of Canterbury principal Steve Hart called to say: “’I don’t know what happened this weekend at the tournament but everyone’s calling me about Bishop’.”

    Approaches were coming thick and fast from NRL clubs and their agents.
    Attention like this can be difficult for youngsters, particularly in the age of social media.

    But this hasn’t been a problem for Neal and his siblings, who face a blanket rule of no cellphones and no social media until they turn 18.
    Betsy Neal says social media is “an awesome tool”, but didn’t want to see it dilute the effort her son or any of their children gave in their passions, with Trevor Neal adding it allowed them to develop “a stronger sense of identity” by avoiding the noise social media creates.
    While he remains off social media, an exception has been made for Neal when it comes to a phone, due to spending time training in Auckland.
    “It was just hard not having a phone. They [the Warriors] had to message the house parent I was staying with to tell me stuff and then I had to tell him to tell them,” Neal says.
    Back in Christchurch, St Thomas’ league coach and deputy principal Andrew Auimatagi first met Neal at 14. He describes the second-rower as supremely gifted physically, but also emotionally mature beyond his years in a way he’s never seen before.
    “Even in those tense moments, you won’t see Bishop rattled. He’s quite consistent with his emotions; I don’t think we’ve ever seen him flip out so I think that’s a real superpower of his.”
    Being the player everybody wants in their side has created a seemingly exhausting schedule at times, spanning both rugby league and union.
    “It didn’t feel like it was heaps to me. [Like] Mum and Dad, said I love being active, so I like being at training,” Neal says.

    Betsy Neal even says training would be used as a disciplining tool and if he didn’t clean his room, he wouldn’t be able to go.
    “Within two minutes, the room was clean, so he’s always been good like that.”
    The raw talent combined with a staggering work ethic meant it was merely a matter of when, not if, the Warriors reached out.
    As well as it being Neal’s life-long dream to wear the Warriors jersey, club CEO and general manager Cameron George’s promise of a spot in the U17 Harold Matthews side sealed the deal, amidst Australian clubs flying the Neal’s out for weeklong visits.
    “Other clubs didn’t have an Under-17 team so would’ve gone over [to Australia], played school footy or something else. So, I thought ‘that’d be mean playing Under-17s in the Warriors kit and all that’”, Neal says.
    Even before signing with the club, he was invited by George to train with the S.G. Ball (U19) side for two weeks in the summer of 2022-2023, at only 14.
    The following summer expanded on that experience and had him stationed in Auckland for three months, training with the first-grade side.
    That continued the over last summer and was coupled with the entire U17 Harold Matthews campaign, ending in May this year.

    Training alongside idols he used to watch on repeat is a feeling Neal describes as “buzzy as”, and while it’s now slightly easier, spending time with Roger Tuivasa-Sheck still catches him out.
    “He was the main dude I would watch before my games. [Now] walking with him to the field, I’ll be talking to him and then I would just be like, ‘damn, it’s Roger’.” Through those summers, Warriors head of junior pathways Tony Iro got to understand Neal on and off the field, noting the step up to professional footy is “brutal”.
    “From a physical perspective, he’s got everything that an NRL player needs but that’s probably only half of what is required to continue playing at that level,” Iro says.
    “Bishop’s a talented footballer but you need more than that to progress. You need to be able to work hard. You need to show some toughness.”
    Even at 15, Iro described Neal as a natural leader that boys are “prepared to follow” and believes he certainly has the tools and the drive to reach his goals.
    That drive for Neal comes back to the sacrifices his parents have made and continue to make in supporting him.
    “My parents are the best,” he says.
    “It sounds so cliché but taking me to all my trainings and everything ... probably don’t thank them enough.”
    As well emphasising strong family and friends connections, Neal says he’s a devout Christian and has a passion for music, having produced six songs with his schoolmates, including Warriors teammate Lennox Tuiloma.
    Having those off-field interests was emphasised by legendary coach Wayne Bennett.
    He said it was important for the youngster “to still be a kid”, as the professional environment happens fast, Betsy Neal says, recounting a conversation she had with Bennett.
    It’s clear Neal is hardwired for one thing however – making his footy dreams come true.
    “It’s just the way I am and the way I think – I’m gonna make my Plan A work.”
    “If the footy pops off, that’s awesome, but whether he does or not, he’s going to be a solid-as dude,” Trevor Neal adds.
    Looking forward, the moving boxes piled up in the Neal house show a family that’s committed to supporting their youngest in his professional journey and ready to make the move from Christchurch to their new home in Auckland.
    “It’s just cool seeing a kid doing what they love,” Betsy Neal says.
    “As a parent, that’s my baby still running around, except now he’s not doing it in the hallways and in the backyard. He’s doing [it] on the field, in the Warriors’ colours.”
     
    Fans are rarely wrong about their teams players.

    Titans fans were all proven correct that Clark was a big loss and Boyd was a good back up, not much more.

    Majority are glad to see the back of AKP which suggests him turning up and killing it is unlikely.

    That being said, Webby has shown his players improve under him. AKP needs a lot of improvement, so a steady uptick is not necessarily enough.

    I'm excited by the possibility and to be fair even more ecstatic that the management of the club are seeing what we see.

    The club is steamrolling in the right direction. I don't think I ever really expected the club would get itself into the position that it's in.

    Every single area seems to be excelling, recruitment across both mens and womens, junior pathways, club financials, brand prescence. We're nailing everything and this plays into recruitment too.
     
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