Bay of Plenty Times

Fans to go ‘berserk’ for their Warriors

- Corey Rosser of Nrl.com

It has been more than 1000 days since the New Zealand Warriors last played an NRL match in Auckland, and the Mount Smart Joker has the hair and beard to prove it.

Since the club’s last match at Mount Smart Stadium in Round 24 of the 2019 season, the club super fan, who doesn’t reveal his real identity, has refrained from having a haircut or shaving his beard.

“Shaving and cutting my hair was always one of my NRL season rituals… so since the last home game in 2019 I haven’t cut my hair and the beard has only been trimmed once,” the Joker told Nrl.com. “Now I can’t wait to get it all off.”

Despite bringing an unwanted seven-game losing streak back to New Zealand, enthusiasm for the Warriors hasn’t diminished one bit if ticket sales for the homecoming match against the Wests Tigers on Sunday are anything to go by.

The stadium sold out more than a week before game day, becoming the second-fastest selling match in the club’s history, behind only their debut game back in 1995.

Among the crowd of more than 26,500 expected will be husband and wife duo Lorraine and Dave Mckee, who despite living in Christchur­ch, hadn’t missed a single Warriors home game in the 12 years before the pandemic struck.

At 82, Lorraine speaks of the childlike joy watching the team in person brings her.

“I think I’ll cry on game day probably. I can’t wait for that feeling of seeing them running back out onto the field,” she said.

“The crowd are going to go berserk, mate, berserk.

“I’ve missed the club, missed the people, we have still watched the games, but it’s been pretty awful without getting to meet all our friends at the games. We’ve made some fantastic friends up there. We’ve already booked all of our flights for the remaining games in Auckland and will be at all of them.”

That lost time with friends over the past couple of seasons is a common theme for many of the Warriors faithful, with home matches each year forming a large part of their social calendar.

“It’s a community, you go to the game and you see your Warriors family, and for the last few years we haven’t had the opportunit­y to hang out, have a pot of chips and talk some smack,” the Joker added.

“For a diehard fan, the result matters, but it doesn’t matter at the same time. It’s being there with mates and experienci­ng it.”

For Warriors member Emma Harper, the team’s extended stay in Australia left her feeling on the outside for the first time since she began supporting the club in 2007.

Not only has she missed interactin­g with other fans, but also the players themselves, who in a typical year they would get to know through various meet and greet events.

“When you’re used to going to games every other week, meet and greets, all that stuff that goes along with being a member, most of us have felt a bit on the outside,” she said.

“Normally you’d get to know the players and they get to know you, but now it is basically a new team

who none of us have got to know in person.

“It’s going to be quite emotional getting back and giving everyone hugs.

“We all appreciate their efforts to keep the competitio­n going.”

It’s a community, you go to the game and you see your Warriors family, and for the last few years we haven’t had the opportunit­y to hang out, have a pot of chips and talk some smack.

This article was first published on Nrl.com and is reprinted with permission.

The Joker

 ?? Photo / Photosport ?? The Joker is a Warriors super fan who has been doing it hard without having his team in new Zealand.
Photo / Photosport The Joker is a Warriors super fan who has been doing it hard without having his team in new Zealand.

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