The Post

Warriors can forget title after surrender

- DUNCAN JOHNSTONE

OPINION: New Zealand Warriors fans can forget about dreaming of an NRL title win in 2018.

The Kiwi franchise went from being contenders to pretenders inside a week.

Having continued their heady start to the season by handing the Dragons their first loss last Friday, Stephen Kearney’s side suffered a brutal reality check in the form of a 50-10 thumping from the Melbourne Storm on Wednesday night.

After being unbeaten over their opening five matches they have gone loss, win, loss and sadly their trademark traits are returning.

Outmuscled by Brisbane to blot their bright start, they were completely outplayed by 2017 premiers Melbourne.

Warriors fans, desperate to seize on any hope after so many hopeless seasons, must now face the horrible realisatio­n that the current team is prone to disasters just like their predecesso­rs.

One loss shouldn’t define a season, nor should a decent early win or two but there were alarming signs in Melbourne that old habits die hard.

Just when there was a feeling that the Warriors had turned a corner and that real heart was backing up new-found fitness levels, a lack of ticker was terrible to behold in a match dedicated to the spirit of the Anzacs.

The tireless tackling against the Dragons gave real hope that the days of conceding 50 points had been left behind. But that nightmare returned in embarrassi­ng fashion with the Warriors blown away by the Storm.

In a throwback to last year, the defence was paper thin at times and there remains a feeling that the team is still too dependent on some of its supposed star quality.

While they may have found a worthy backup to Shaun Johnson in the form of Mason Lino, the absence of Tohu Harris against the Storm brought with it a loss of attitude as much as ability.

New recruit Harris has been the tireless workhorse for the Warriors in their promising resurgence. Without him they lacked organisati­on and authority. It’s no coincidenc­e that Harris learned his trade through 117 games for the Storm before moving across the Tasman.

The loss of the in-form Issac Luke early in the Melbourne meltdown will place increased pressure on the Warriors as they look to respond to this shambolic performanc­e.

Without his speed and running game from dummy half, the Warriors lacked penetratio­n up the middle.

It’s still early days and the NRL is a draining competitio­n, a relentless grind that is more a marathon than the sprinter’s form shown by the Warriors in 2018.

They have been fast out of the blocks and the target must be to capitalise on that.

Title-talk is stupid but a postseason appearance remains realistic. They have a handy buffer to work with to achieve that but things can change quickly in this ruthless championsh­ip as the Warriors know too well.

It’s crucial that coach Kearney steadies his rocky ship right now.

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