The New Zealand Herald

Back to Earth

Warriors go down to Tigers

- Michael Burgess

On this evidence, the big win over the Bulldogs last week was a bit of a mirage. The Warriors have fallen to their first defeat of the season, and it was horrible.

They barely fired a shot last night, slumping to a 34-6 loss to the Wests Tigers to continue an awful record at Campbellto­wn, where the Auckland club have won only one of their last six games.

The evening was forgettabl­e. Anything that could go wrong for the Warriors generally did. Their handling was poor, in admittedly wet conditions, their defensive line was loose and they lacked intensity on attack and defence. The Tigers were much more desperate, and man-forman, the Warriors were completely outplayed.

And while they created little themselves, they fell victim to a Robbie Farah master class. The 35-year-old was dominant from dummy half, with three try assists and a cheeky touchdown from dummy half.

Of most concern was the Warriors attack. Sure, they were hurt by mistakes which killed momentum but they were terribly predictabl­e when they did have opportunit­ies, especially in the first half when the match was still in the balance. The ball was just shuttled from side to side and it made for easy pickings for Tigers defenders.

While everyone at Mt Smart wants to put the departure of Shaun Johnson behind them, performanc­es like this highlight his absence, as they missed his creativity, flair and pace.

After last week’s promising fare, the Warriors in the first half were untidy and uninspired. They lacked the focus and intensity of round one and crippled any momentum with errors. Any time the Tigers made a mistake, the Warriors invariably came up with one on the next set.

There was a knock-on straight after earning a penalty, and another fumble a couple of plays after Blake Green forced a repeat set. Both Green and Keighran gifted seven-tackle sets with kicks that went way too long, and on another occasion, the Warriors had a chance for six more tackles, but didn’t hear the referee’s call and chipped ahead instead.

The Warriors had their moments, with Ken Maumalo set free down the left wing by Keighran, only to be stopped by a desperate Esan Marsters tackle, and Roger Tuivasa-Sheck looked dangerous on the right edge.

But the Tigers always seemed more likely — with Farah, Benji Marshall and Luke Brooks making inroads up the middle — and took the lead after sustained pressure.

Farah showed his experience with an exquisite cut-out ball to send Corey Thompson over metres from the line, though Solomone Kata and David Fusitu’a were guilty of misjudging the numbers.

Worse was to come in the dying minutes of the first half, as the Warriors seemed to switch off. They were caught out by a close-range Farah grubber, which squeezed through the line and was forced by Robert Jennings. There was nothing conclusive about the replays but referee Ashley Klein had made the onfield decision of try.

The Warriors had to respond early in the second half and initially did. Tuivasa-Sheck’s pace gave Peta Hiku an opportunit­y to release Maumalo, who did well to finish just inside the

touchline in the 45th minute.

But that was as good as it got. They couldn’t captialise, giving up a cheap penalty, then a soft try, with Farah again exploiting chinks in the Warriors right edge in what was almost a carbon copy of the first Thompson try.

From there, the second half was a procession for the Tigers, as Marshall created a try for Mahe Fonua, before Farah dived over from dummy half. Michael Chee-Kam was put into space by Marshall — again on the right edge — to give the scoreline an embarrassi­ng feel.

Tigers 34 (Corey Thompson 2, Robert Jennings, Mahe Fonua, Robbie Farah, Michael Chee-Kam tries; Esan Marsters 5 goals)

Warriors 6 (Ken Maumalo try; Adam Keighran goal)

Halftime: 12-0.

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 ??  ?? The Tigers celebrate Michael Chee-Kam’s late try, their sixth of the night against the lacklustre Warriors.
The Tigers celebrate Michael Chee-Kam’s late try, their sixth of the night against the lacklustre Warriors.
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Photo / Photosport

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