The New Zealand Herald

HOMEWRECKE­RS

Warriors winless streak at three as Gold Coast spoil Anzac occasion

- Michael Burgess

The Warriors are in a hole — there is no sugarcoati­ng it. Defeats at home are always hard to take but the 27-24 loss to the Gold Coast Titans at Mt Smart Stadium in Auckland yesterday will hurt more than most.

A game that promised to be a magnificen­t occasion, with the first Anzac Day match in Auckland since 2015, turned into the ultimate anticlimax as the Warriors were upset.

They produced a rollicking finish — and could have, maybe should have, stolen it — but instead extended their winless streak to three games.

It wasn’t all bad. The Warriors started well and finished even better, dominating the final 25 minutes. but left themselves with too much to do after conceding 27 unanswered points in a horror stretch to blow an early 12-0 lead.

It was an awful period; one that will be hard to explain even after video reviews. The Titans were desperate and it showed, while the Warriors couldn’t switch on until it was too late.

There will be analysis of the bunker’s decision to deny a late Rocco Berry try — which looked like a tough call — but margins shouldn’t be so tight at Mt Smart, which was a fortress last year.

The team have lost their defensive mojo, especially on the right edge, which looked shaky. They were also killed by errors and penalties in the first half. Even when they got rolling at the end, the composure was missing, with passes going to ground and wrong options taken.

The Warriors made a perfect start. The first try was a peach, with Charnze Nicoll-Klokstad looping around Shaun Johnson, the product of a snappy attacking set.

There was more three minutes later, as Addin Fonua-Blake ran off a perfect Johnson ball to finish under the posts — though the Warriors were fortunate after the referee missed a Berry ruck infringeme­nt.

Just as it felt like things couldn’t be going any better, they started to slowly unravel. It began with a soft try, as a poor defensive read from Dallin Watene-Zelezniak exposed the right edge, with AJ Brimson finishing off the long-range effort.

The game developed into a grind but the Titans gradually got on top, helped by a succession of penalties. Jacob Laban and Roger TuivasaShe­ck tried to inspire with big hits but the Australian team were on a roll and looking more confident with every set, as the Warriors were starved of possession and territory.

The pressure told with Tanah Boyd’s try after 30 minutes.

The Warriors had their moments but were in a hole. A desperate Tohu Harris tackle stopped a certain try but David Fifita ploughed his way over moments later.

The Warriors’ mental state was epitomised by their bizarre captain’s challenge just 18 seconds before halftime before Boyd knocked over a field goal.

The pattern continued early in the second half with a Titans penalty, followed by a couple of misses on the right edge allowing Alofiana KhanPereir­a to cross in the corner.

The comeback looked under way when Tuivasa-Sheck soared AFLstyle to take a Johnson chip — as the crowd erupted — before the bunker found a minuscule Wayde Egan knock-on in the leadup. That was deflating and there looked to be no way back after Brimson’s second try in the 54th minute for a 15-point lead.

But from nowhere, the Warriors found a late revival. Fonua-Blake powered over from 20m, off another Johnson pass. If that was good, what followed was even better as Berry plucked a bomb out of the sky. But there was no coup de grace in the final 17 minutes. A Berry effort was controvers­ially scrubbed by the bunker and a succession of sets on the line were stifled by the smothering Titans defence.

Warriors 24 (Addin Fonua-Blake 2, Charnze Nicoll-Klokstad, Rocco Berry tries; Shaun Johnson 4 con)

Gold Coast Titans 27 (AJ Brimson 2, Tanah Boyd, David Fifita, Alofiana Khan-Pereira tries; Tanah Boyd 3 con, field goal). HT: 12-19.

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