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WARRIORS - 2009 Season Preview

gong_eagle

First Grade
Messages
7,655
WARRIORS - 2009 Season Preview
NRL.com
http://www.nrl.com/News/Latest/tabid/10244/default.aspx?id=53919


2009 looms as a huge year for New Zealand’s Warriors.
Previous seasons have seen the Warriors in two successive finals and a superb run to within one week of the grand final last season.
Popular opinion had them a playmaker short of a premiership 12 months ago but the unexpected return of legendary halfback Stacey Jones completes the puzzle and competition favourites Manly and Melbourne will be looking over their shoulders at the Kiwi outfit as the season approaches.
In fact, even with the loss of veterans Ruben Wiki, Logan Swann and Wairangi Koopu, the Warriors look stronger than ever this year.
The arrival of former North Queensland back-rower Jacob Lillyman adds another State of Origin player to their ranks, they’ve bolstered their backline depth through Broncos youngsters Denan Kemp and Joel Moon and, perhaps most importantly at all, the return from injury of fullback Wade McKinnon sees one of their key strike weapons back on the park.
Last season proved somewhat of a breakthrough season for Manu Vatuvei, Simon Mannering and even the experienced Lance Hohaia – who all found some much-welcome consistency – and they’ll all play a massive role in the Warriors’ title push this season alongside evergreen captain Steve Price.
The question that remains unanswered is how the club as a whole handles the tragic death of 20-year-old back-rower Sonny Fai, who was swept out to sea in early January.
How They’ll Play It
The Warriors no longer boast the brutal forward pack that saw them steamroll their way to three consecutive finals appearances between 2001 and 2003 but they remain a dynamic attacking side that is finally learning to play as a unit. The influence of captain Steve Price has been dramatic and his young team-mates have improved immeasurably under his influence.
With his ability to constantly punch through the middle of the field the Warriors remain difficult to contain but it is the likes of Vatuvei, McKinnon, Brent Tate and Jerome Ropati out wide that gives them such an edge with the ball in hand.
Expect some thrilling tries in 2009.
Keep An Eye On
Manu Vatuvei. Once maligned for his poor ball handling, he found his confidence last season and proceeded to terrorise opponents with his speed and incredible power. Nicknamed ‘The Beast’ (and with good reason), he boasts an incredible try-scoring record of 45 from 68 games for the Warriors and 12 from 19 for the Kiwis.
They’ll Really Miss
Ruben Wiki. The evergreen forward played a phenomenal 16 seasons in the NRL and is one of just 10 players so far to have reached 300 first grade games. Aside from his relentless heavy-hitting, he has played a major role in guiding the Warriors’ crop of young forwards over the past four years. With Wiki now retired, they will need the next crop of stars to step up.
It’s Time To Stand Up
Sam Rapira. The 21-year-old had a quiet year in 2008 after impressing in his debut season two years earlier, but now is the time to find some consistency. The Warriors have lost veteran forwards Ruben Wiki, Logan Swann and Wairangi Koopu and 2009 looms as captain Steve Price’s final year before retirement.
It’s up to Rapira to prove that he is the man to lead the Warriors’ forward pack into the future.
Coach Watch
Ivan Cleary is about as safe as they come, barring absolute disaster in 2009. The former Warriors fullback – a member of the club’s 2002 grand final side – has put the club back on track since taking over as coach from Tony Kemp three years ago with two finals appearances and a near miss in his first year (after having four competition points stripped at the start of the year for salary cap breaches) on his resume.
His playing days at the Warriors seem to have helped him understand how best to bridge the vast cultural gap between the local Polynesian players and the high-percentage of Australian players at the club.
They’re All The Better For
The return of Stacey Jones. Arguably the greatest Kiwi of all time, Jones has been sorely missed since leaving for France three years ago. He returned as an assistant coach in 2008 before Cleary persuaded him to return to the playing field this season.
A classy and experienced playmaker, Jones will provide the direction his younger team-mates have been searching for since his departure.
A top-four finish will be the Warriors’ realistic goal and a premiership is certainly within their grasp.
Injuries were cruel last year, robbing them of Wade McKinnon for the entire season and key players Steve Price, Jerome Ropati and Manu Vatuvei for long periods.
Provided they stay fit, the Warriors have the ammunition to destroy any side on their day.
Under-20s
Somewhat of an unknown quantity heading into last season’s inaugural Toyota Cup season, the Warriors quickly established themselves as a side to fear and finished the regular season in third place behind eventual grand finalists Canberra and Brisbane. Their sheer power and natural flamboyance would suggest another strong showing in 2009, but coach Tony Iro has warned against making such predictions of any side still learning to deal with the demands of such a competition.
“I’m confident that we’ve got a handy squad but I expect the competition to be a lot tougher this year – and there is always the unknown with this age group, how many boys are going to step up and how many aren’t,” he said.
“I’m sure every coach has the same issue.
“We’ve got probably half of our squad coming back so we won’t be lacking for experience, we just need half a dozen of them to be getting close to NRL level to push us up the ladder.”
Last season it was Russell Packer and Ben Matulino who led the way, subsequently earning NRL selection for their efforts, and Iro said he wouldn’t be surprised if a few more made the jump in 2009. Those expected to lead the way include utility Elijah Taylor and outside backs Thomas Ah Van and Bill Tupou.
Iro, though, admitted the challenges would be great this season and pointed to the tragic disappearance of Sonny Fai as a major hurdle his players would have to overcome. “It hasn’t been easy,” he said.
“Without knowing too many of the boys that well, it’s probably the first experience they’ve had of losing family or a close friend. We’re still yet to see what the effects of that are.
“We still haven’t had any real closure on that issue either but we’re in a fortunate situation that we get to spend a fair bit of time together now and I think that’s helped the boys cope.”
New Breed
With five NRL games to his name at just 19 years of age, Russell Packer has his sights set on filling the bench position left vacant by the departure of Kiwi legend and 300-gamer Ruben Wiki. And he’s treading the path cleared by fellow youngster and Kiwi international Sam Rapira. Keep an eye out for more on Russell Packer when NRL.com brings you New Breed profiles in the coming weeks.


Posted:Mon, 02 Mar 2009 14:00:00
 

ozbash

Referee
Messages
26,986
The Warriors no longer boast the brutal forward pack that saw them steamroll their way to three consecutive finals appearances between 2001 and 2003

lol, ok...

They’ll Really Miss
Ruben Wiki.


I dont think so, his leadership far outweighed his playing form last year. Once over his rib cartilage injury Rubes upped the ante but he was always going to be a part timer..

Apart from that, not bad..

The U20's will be very well known by about rd 5-6..
 

MKEB...

Moderator
Staff member
Messages
5,989
All in all, that echoes alot of our sentiments in here.
A bit suprised at the way we have been talked up though.

A good pice IMO
 

LeagueNut

First Grade
Messages
6,981
I probably know this already ... but what is Ruben doing this year? Is he going to stick around as a mentor for the team?
 

Scottey

Juniors
Messages
500
Probably a fair enough article.

It makes me laugh how no matter how good Manu gets, he'll still be the guy that couldn't catch a ball before. Whenever Ivan gets asked about this, he always defends Manu, saying it was only that one game against the Eels. Rightly so. That same year, when Matt Bowen was carving everyone up, he had less mistakes that Mr Magician himself.

I don't see Ruben as a major loss either. The time was right to move on. He was looking a little on the slow side early in the season, but finished strongly, thus leaving on a good note. He'll have just as much impact off the feild as he did on it.
 

blain

Juniors
Messages
1,621
yeah it pisses me off what they say about manus hands and that our massive forwards will tire later on...

performance wise, i think royal will be better than wiki last year. he was ok, but nothing special.
 

Sef0r

Juniors
Messages
51
Gotta love the NRL season, 4 weeks of pre-season games, 26 regular season games, 4 finals games, thats 34 weeks. Not counting the training weeks leading up to the season they only get 18 weeks off.

I wish the NFL was like this.
 

Dr Crane

Live Update Team
Messages
19,531
haha yeah. can't believe the off-season has finished already.

it's kinda brought home to me that i'm not even going to be in the country by the end of the next offseason.

god, round 1 last year feels like yesterday.
 

Blake

Juniors
Messages
425
Yeah I'm out of the country also and pissed that Setanta is showing only a couple of NRL games each weekend.

Any chance someone has a dvd recorder and would record the Warriors games then upload to Rapidshare for me to download?

Pretty please?
 
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