Herald on Sunday

How to blow a 22-point lead… the Warriors way

The curse of the Panthers returns as woeful Warriors hit rock bottom at the foot of the Blue Mountains by blowing a big lead.

- By Michael Burgess

The Warriors have had some inexplicab­le performanc­es over the years but this one will be near the top of the pile.

In terms of scars, the physiologi­cal effect of this defeat might take a while to shake.

It wasn’t just a bad day at the office — this was the worst collapse in Warriors history, as they gave up a 22-point halftime lead to lose 36-28 to the Penrith Panthers.

On three previous occasions, the Auckland team had forfeited an 18-point advantage to lose, including twice in the 2012 season, but this was a new low.

It’s the kind of loss that will prompt special midweek meetings, and lead to speculatio­n that the old demons have re-emerged at Mt Smart.

“It’s bitterly disappoint­ing,” said prop Jacob Lillyman. “We gave them that game. We have got to have a good, hard look at ourselves and regroup during the week.”

The Warriors held a 28-6 advantage at the break, after a spectacula­r first half that yielded five tries. But that was as good as it got. They came out in the second half looking as if they just needed to coast to the finish line, with an attitude that the match was already won. That was never going to happen; not against a Penrith side that has endured so many setbacks this year and were desperate.

In hindsight, it’s no wonder the Panthers reneged on their deal to play the Warriors in Christchur­ch this year. Penrith were once known as the “Chocolate Soldiers” but it’s the Warriors who tend to melt when they travel to the foot of the Blue Mountains.

They haven’t won there in five years, including a limp 2014 defeat which blew a golden chance to make the playoffs. The nadir came

under Matt Elliott in 2013 with the infamous 62-6 humiliatio­n, but given the context, this defeat was probably worse.

The most concerning aspect of the second half fade was the inability to arrest Penrith’s momentum; it was like watching someone trying to stop a tsunami with a beach umbrella. Penrith are a good side who have underperfo­rmed this year, but they are not that good.

But none of the senior Warriors stood up in the second half. Not Kieran Foran, who was superb in the first half but faded after halftime. Not Ryan Hoffman, nor Roger Tuivasa-Sheck, who had an uncomforta­ble day at the back. Not Isaac Luke, not Ben Matulino and not Shaun Johnson, who was successful­ly targeted by the Penrith attack. This performanc­e again magnified the importance of Simon Mannering, as it is hard to imagine a similar second half collapse with him on the field.

After the hard-won gains of the past month — with the 14-13 victory over the Roosters and admirable performanc­es in Canberra and Melbourne — it feels like the Warriors are back to their uncertain selves.

Every other side in the NRL will know that the Warriors are still susceptibl­e to the shakes, still able to beat themselves if the opposition can stay in the contest.

This wasn’t how it was supposed to be in 2017, and such a result probably doesn’t help their ongoing recruitmen­t efforts.

The turnaround is baffling, even in hindsight. When David Fusitu’a ran 90 metres to score on halftime, the result looked beyond doubt.

But the Warriors were lethargic from the start of the second half, while Penrith were all purpose and determinat­ion. Two quick Panthers tries seemed to drain the resolve from the Warriors, and it was oneway traffic after that.

Warriors 28 (K Foran, C NicollKlok­stad 2, R Hoffman, D Fusitu’a tries; S Johnson 4 goals) Penrith 36 (I Yeo 2, D Watene-Zelezniak, W Blake, M Moylan, T Peachey tries; N Cleary 6 goals). Halftime: 28-6.

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 ?? Photosport.nz ?? Shaun Johnson was successful­ly targeted during last night’s loss at Penrith.
Photosport.nz Shaun Johnson was successful­ly targeted during last night’s loss at Penrith.

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