The New Zealand Herald

Warriors should prepare for move to Oz

- Chris Rattue opinion chris.rattue@ nzherald.co. nz

As bad as the Warriors’ 2020 NRL season is going, it’s 2021 which should freak people out.

The latest moves being considered in the halls of power supposedly include allocating the Warriors 24 home games next year, as compensati­on for having to live across the ditch for most of this season.

A more pertinent question is this: What if the Warriors are asked to live across the ditch again next year?

Far from getting closer to a transtasma­n travel bubble, Australia is experienci­ng an alarming spike in Covid-19 cases.

Sport has done its best to rush back, but under these circumstan­ces it must also learn to wait in line. Home games for the Warriors could be out of the question, at least for some of the year. Far from contemplat­ing 24 home games, the Warriors must now start preparing to shift its whole operation to Australia next year.

They can’t refuse to play in the NRL, and they need to be in the only place where they have the ability to sign serious player reinforcem­ents. They need to adopt a new attitude, a new spirit, and jump into the task, boots and all.

The only way to ensure that is to move to Australia for now and start preparing families for the shift. The alternativ­e is a club which could fall apart if it is forced to take what is shaping as a depleted and divided team into next year’s competitio­n.

The Warriors are skating on thin ice.

With so much doubt over the 2021 season and a new coach yet to be appointed, it is hard to see them attracting top players to turn the results around while providing the proper developmen­t environmen­t for emerging stars.

One thing the Warriors should never do — however bad it might get — is quit on the 2020 season, although this sentiment, being expressed in some quarters, is understand­able in such a crisis.

Profession­al sport is all about finding a way, getting off the canvas, staying in the fight.

It’s best to hang on to any semblance of honour and keep paying the bills. To quit now would also throw the competitio­n into disarray, the consequenc­es of which would hit the Warriors as hard as anyone.

Surely men such as club captain Roger Tuivasa-Sheck would hate to traipse through Auckland Airport, tail between legs, as the cameras scanned for any sign of a tear on their premature return. The imagery alone would be disastrous.

For the Warriors as a club to cry “no more”, to have that stain on them, is unthinkabl­e.

They won’t be the first NRL club to go on a long losing run. They won’t even be the first Warriors team to go on a long losing run.

No wonder some players are already quitting though. They are being fed too much BS about how tough their lives are.

You hear it everywhere, from the loaded media questions to opponents’ words of sympathy and constant references from commentato­rs.

Yes, their situation is not ideal and a stern test of character for a club which has bordered on a farce for 25 years thanks to wild mismanagem­ent.

But the players are still leading interestin­g lives and earning great money for their faraway families.

How does this compare, for instance, against the medical people around the world doing long hours, days on end, in dangerous virus situations, hardly ever seeing their families?

Life can be tough, even without the dreadful virus.

Come on, people. The Warriors are hardly being sent down a coal mine every day.

The Warriors must move to Australia for 2021 and start preparing families for the shift. The alternativ­e is a club which could fall apart if it is forced to take what is shaping as a depleted and divided team into next year’s competitio­n.

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