(Redirected from Auckland Warriors)
The 'New Zealand Warriors' (formerly the 'Auckland Warriors') are a professional
rugby league team based in
Auckland,
New Zealand. They compete in Australasia's premier rugby league competition, the
National Rugby League premiership.
The Warriors were founded in
1995 and are based at
Mt Smart Stadium in Auckland.
History
The History of the Bid
Rugby league was largely centred around Auckland ever since the
New Zealand Rugby League was founded in
1909. Auckland produced the bulk of the international squad for many years, and most of these players headed to either
Australia or
Great Britain to play.
The Auckland representative side was consistently providing top opposition to touring sides. An Auckland team was admitted into the mid-week ARL
Amco Cup competition in
1978. In their first year they made the semi-finals, and were defeated by the overall competition winners,
Eastern Suburbs. They remained into the competition until the early
1980s. In
1987, an Auckland side toured Great Britain and claimed wins over powerhouse clubs Leeds and Wigan.
In
1988, serious investigation into an Auckland team entering the Sydney competition commenced, encouraged mainly by the
Mt Albert club. On
17 May 1992, the announcement stating an Auckland-based team's entry into the Australian Rugby League competition, the Winfield Cup in
1995, was made. This followed very good turnouts to a number of
NSWRL club games played in Auckland. The new team was to be called the Auckland Warriors and run by the Auckland Rugby League organisation. The original colours selected were blue, white, red and green. Blue and white are recognised as the colours of Auckland, while red and green were the colours of the Warriors' original sponsor,
DB Bitter.
===
The First Season===
| Position | Pld | Won | Drew | Lost | Bye | Points For | Points Against | Points Differential |
|---|
| '10th (of 20)' | 22 | 13 | 0 | 9 | - | 538 | 501 | +37 |
The coach of the new team would be former Parramatta and Wigan coach John Monie. A number of fading stars were signed, such as
Greg Alexander and
Andy Platt. Captain
Dean Bell was one of the few signings who performed regurlarly. Former Rugby union players such as
John Kirwan and
Marc Ellis were brought in in later years.
The Warriors first year in the Australian Rugby League was
1995. Their debut match was against the
Brisbane Broncos on
10 March 1995 in front of 30,000 people at a newly refurbished
Mt Smart Stadium. The Warriors led 22-10 at one point in the second half of the match, however the Broncos finished far stronger and defeated the new club 25-22.
The Warriors were deducted two competition points for an interchange error. In a match against
Western Suburbs, the Warriors used five interchange players instead of the allowed four. The Warriors won the match comfortably, 46-12. This error had disaterous consequences for the club, as they utimately missed the finals by two competition points. The season saw the debut of future star,
Stacey Jones, who scored a try on debut in a 40-4 rout of Parramatta in Sydney. The biggest issue with the season was the lack of consistency that plagues the Warriors even today, despite a six match winning streak late in the season. It was observed that when the Warriors weren't winning by 20 points they were losing by 20 points.
===
1996===
| Position | Pld | Won | Drew | Lost | Bye | Points For | Points Against | Points Differential |
|---|
| '11th (of 20)' | 21 | 10 | 0 | 11 | - | 412 | 427 | -15 |
The
Australian Rugby League season 1996 could have been regarded as a better one for the Warriors. The Warriors found themselves siding with the Super League during the
Super League War when the
New Zealand Rugby League signed up to the rebel competition. They claimed their first 'victory' over the Broncos in round one of the competition that year, after all Super League clubs agreed to boycott the first round of the competition in protest. The Warriors won the two points when they travelled to Brisbane with a squad of players that were unsigned to Super League, forcing the Broncos to forfeit the match.
With four rounds remaining the Warriors were in sixth place in the competition, seemingly headed for a finals berth. They proceeded to lose all four matches to tumble out of the finals. The only positives were that young New Zealand talents
Stacey Jones and
Joe Vagana had superb seasons.
===
Super League 1997===
| Position | Pld | Won | Drew | Lost | Bye | Points For | Points Against | Points Differential |
|---|
| '7th (of 10)' | 18 | 7 | 0 | 11 | - | 332 | 406 | -74 |
The Warriors spent
1997 in the breakaway
Super League Telstra Cup competition. Despite the reduced number of teams, they failed to make an impression on the competition. Monie was replaced by
Frank Endacott as coach midway through the 1997 season. The only positive was the teams performance in the
World Club Challenge. The Warriors hammered
United Kingdom powerhouses Wigan and St Helens, and comfortably handled Warrington. The Warriors were knocked out in the Semi Finals by eventual winners Brisbane, going down 16-22.
===
1998===
| Position | Pld | Won | Drew | Lost | Bye | Points For | Points Against | Points Differential |
|---|
| '15th (of 20)' | 24 | 9 | 0 | 15 | - | 417 | 518 | -101 |
The
first season of the reformed competition was a year that saw few highlights for the club. It was readily apparent that the club needed a new approach and attitude. Fortunately for them, they were in a better than the other two clubs that joined the competition in 1995.
===
1999 and the Tainui Era===
| Position | Pld | Won | Drew | Lost | Bye | Points For | Points Against | Points Differential |
|---|
| '11th (of 20)' | 24 | 10 | 0 | 14 | - | 538 | 498 | +40 |
Former
Kiwi Mark Graham took over as coach in
1999. The club was sold off to a consortuim that included ex-Kiwi coach
Graeme Lowe and the
Tainui tribe. The club again disappointed on field, but a mid season ultimatum saw a strong finish to the season, with the side winning five of their last six games. The signs appeared promising for the new millennium.
===
Financial Collapse and Reinvention - 2000===
| Position | Pld | Won | Drew | Lost | Bye | Points For | Points Against | Points Differential |
|---|
| '13th (of 14)' | 24 | 8 | 2 | 16 | - | 426 | 662 | -236 |
In
National Rugby League season 2000 the Warriors could only finish second last. This season included the Warriors' largest ever loss, 0-54 to the Dragons in
Wollongong. Alarmingly, the problems off-field overshadowed the on-field problems. The majority shareholders were under intense financial pressure, and the clubs future was looking bleak at best. The key assets of the club were purchased by business tycoon
Eric Watson. This did not include player contracts, and many players were released and had to fight to get the money they had been promised. Ultimately only 10 players from the 2000 season were retained.
The club was rebranded as the New Zealand Warriors, with new colours of black and grey - resembling the national sporting colours. New coach Daniel Anderson focused on signing unknown New Zealand talent. There were only six Australians in the 2001 squad, and only three foundation players - Monty Betham, Stacey Jones and Logan Swann.
The Glory Years
===
First Finals Series - 2001===
| Position | Pld | Won | Drew | Lost | Bye | Points For | Points Against | Points Differential |
|---|
| '8th (of 14)' | 26 | 12 | 2 | 12 | - | 638 | 629 | +9 |
The cleanout at the club seemed to work, with the team making their first ever finals appearance in
National Rugby League season 2001. They were hammered by the Minor Premiers, the Parramatta Eels 56-12. The loss was at the time the largest in finals series history, but at last things seemed to be going in the right direction at the Warriors.
===
Minor Premiership and Grand Final - 2002===
| Position | Pld | Won | Drew | Lost | Bye | Points For | Points Against | Points Differential |
|---|
| '1st (of 15)' | 24 | 17 | 0 | 7 | 2 | 688 | 454 | +234 |
The Warriors reached their zenith to date in
National Rugby League season 2002. They won the
''Minor Premiership'', finishing in first place at the conclusion of the regular season after the
Bulldogs lost most of their competition points late in the season as a result of salary cap breaches. The club played what stands as the first finals match to have been held outside Australia at Mt Smart Stadium in Week One of the Finals Series. The Warriors would defeat their bogey side Canberra 36-20.
For the Preliminary Final against the
Sharks at
Telstra Stadium the Warriors' sponsors, such as
Vodafone New Zealand and Eric Watson, purchased 15,000 tickets and gave them away for free to anyone with a New Zealand passport. Reportedly, in the 45,000 crowd there were more Warriors supporters than Sharks supporters - astonishing considering the Sharks are a Sydney based club. The Warriors went on to win 16-10.
The Grand Final against the
Sydney Roosters was a tight match for the first hour. The Warriors trailed 2-6 at half time, but took a lead just after halftime when halfback Stacey Jones scored one of the games most memorable individual tries as he left defenders sprawling in his wake on a 40 metre run to the try line. The Roosters ran away with the match in the final 20 minutes after captain
Brad Fittler was involved in a head clash with Warriors prop
Richard Villasanti. The final score was an unflattering 8-30.
===
Top Eight Again - 2003===
| Position | Pld | Won | Drew | Lost | Bye | Points For | Points Against | Points Differential |
|---|
| '6th (of 15)' | 24 | 15 | 0 | 9 | 2 | 545 | 510 | +35 |
2003 was another quite successful year for the Warriors. They played their first ever extra time match, defeating South Sydney 31-30, recovering from a 6-24 deficit. Their first finals match was against the Bulldogs at the Sydney Showground. The Warriors turned on one of their finest performances ever, defeating the Bulldogs 48-22. Winger
Francis Meli scored five tries by himself. The next week a Stacey Jones field goal with only three minutes to play got the Warriors up over the Raiders 17-16. They lost in the Preliminary Final to Minor Premiers and eventual Premiers
Penrith Panthers, 20-28.
Return To Being Battlers
===
The Worst Year Ever - 2004===
| Position | Pld | Won | Drew | Lost | Bye | Points For | Points Against | Points Differential |
|---|
| '14th (of 15)' | 24 | 6 | 0 | 18 | 2 | 427 | 693 | -266 |
Before the
National Rugby League season 2004 started, there were predictions of the Warriors having a highly successful season. These were proved wrong, as the Warriors managed to only win six games to finish equal last, only escaping the wooden spoon by having a superior points differential to South Sydney. Coach Daniel Anderson resigned mid-season after an embarrassing 52 point loss to the Sydney Roosters. His assistant
Tony Kemp was given the Head Coach position, and in his first game in charge the Warriors recorded an emotional 20-14 win over Canberra. A week later, the Warriors first match in
Christchurch since 1996 was a flop, as the Warriors were destroyed by the
Wests Tigers 4-50. The season finished with an embarrassing six game losing streak.
The management looked to rescue a poor year with some high profile signings. Bulldogs captain
Steve Price was signed, as was Kiwis captian
Ruben Wiki, Cowboys half
Nathan Fien and Roosters winger
Todd Byrne.
===
The Rebuilding Begins 2005===
| Position | Pld | Won | Drew | Lost | Bye | Points For | Points Against | Points Differential |
|---|
| '11th (of 15)' | 24 | 10 | 0 | 14 | 2 | 515 | 523 | -13 |
2005 was an improvement over the horror scenes of 2004. The team remained competitive for all of their matches, and their largest loss was only 18 points. The team had a good chance to make the finals, however a four match losing streak late in the season removed those chances. The season was tinged with sadness, as it was announced it would be star halfback Stacey Jones' last season with the club before he would join European club,
Les Catalans. His last match for the team against Manly at
Brookvale Oval was a fine way for him to sign off with the club as he scored the match-winning try with three minutes to go in a 22-20 Warriors win.
At the end of the season the structure of the team was reviewed. CEO
Mick Watson resigned and was replaced by
Wayne Scurrah. Tony Kemp was sacked as coach and his assistant
Ivan Cleary replaced him as head coach.
===
The Salary Cap Drama - 2006===
| Position | Pld | Won | Drew | Lost | Bye | Points For | Points Against | Points Differential |
|---|
| '10th (of 15)' | 24 | 12 | 0 | 12 | 2 | 552 | 463 | +89 |
National Rugby League season 2006 got off to a bad start for the club. In February, the Warriors were found to have committed major breaches of the salary cap in 2005. This followed the high profile signings of Steve Price and Ruben Wiki. On the 27th of February the
NRL announced the club would be deducted four competition points and the club would also be assessed a A$430,000 fine.
Even before the penalty the Warriors were expected to struggle and were being picked as wooden spooners in some quarters. Impressively, it took the Warriors 24 weeks to be completely out of finals contention. Had the Warriors not suffered the four point deduction, they would have finished in eighth place on the ladder, and hence would have taken part in the finals series. As it was, they finished tenth on the ladder.
There were a number of revelations in the squad. Unheralded halfback
Grant Rovelli has been a standout performer. Winger
Patrick Ah Van has cemented a first grade spot and impressed many with his performances, while
George Gatis and
Nathan Fien were fine performers at hooker, and centre
Simon Mannering has been one of the Warriors most impressive backs.
On the 25th of June the Warriors recorded their largest ever win, defeating South Sydney 66-0 at
Telstra Stadium, as part of a four match winning streak that claimed the scalps of the Sydney Roosters, Newcastle Knights, and also the Penrith Panthers. This streak was ended in an extra time loss to the second placed Bulldogs. The Warriors also caused the upset of the season, defeating the Minor Premiers
Melbourne 24-20 at
Olympic Park Stadium in
Melbourne.
The Warriors finished winning eight of their final twelve games to give optimism to the fans ahead of the 2007 season.
===
2007===
| Position | Pld | Won | Drew | Lost | Bye | Points For | Points Against | Points Differential |
|---|
| '4th (of 16)' | 24 | 13 | 1 | 10 | 1 | 593 | 434 | +159 |
The Warriors completed their pre-season with two wins from three games, defeating the
Auckland Lions 64-4, losing to the
North Queensland Cowboys 32-14 and defeating the
Canterbury Bulldogs 36-6.
The Warriors finished the
2007 season in fourth place. The season began with a 34-18 victory over Parramatta at Mt Smart Stadium. The following week the side created history by winning their first two games of the season with a 24-14 victory over premiers, the Brisbane Broncos - the first time they have ever won their opening two games of the season. Following the good start, the team hit a period of indifferent form, falling into a six match losing streak following a last minute win over South Sydney. The team returned to form, defeating Cronulla 12-2 in wild weather at
Toyota Park. Following that victory the side won 9 out of 12 games, with one draw. The Warriors clinched a playoff spot with a 36-14 win over an understrength Manly side, and claimed a home final the following week, defeating the Penrith Panthers 24-20 at CUA Stadium. The Warriors narrowly went down to the Parramatta Eels 12-10 at Mt. Smart Stadium in the Qualifying Final.
On May 30 the Warriors signed
Australian Kangaroos' centre,
Brent Tate from 2008 to 2010 in what was described as a "major coup" for the New Zealand club.
''See Also'':
Peter Leitch (Mad Butcher) - Arguably the Warrior's biggest fan and promoter
Squad
''See Also:
List of New Zealand Warriors players &
List of New Zealand Warriors representatives''
2007 Losses

New Zealander
Cooper Vuna (to
Newcastle Knights)
2008 Losses

New Zealander
Louis Anderson (to
Warrington Wolves)

New South Welshman
Todd Byrne (released)

Queenslander
George Gatis (to
Huddersfield Giants)

New Zealander
Corey Lawrie (released)

Queenslander
Tony Martin (to
Wakefield Trinity Wildcats)
Signings

Scotland
Ian Henderson (until 2009 - from
Bradford Bulls)

Queenslander
Brent Tate (until 2010 - from
Brisbane Broncos)
Contract Extensions

New Zealander
Leeson Ah Mau (until 2009)

New Zealander

Queenslander
Nathan Fien (until 2009)

New Zealander
Lance Hohaia (until 2009)

New Zealander
Scott Jones (until 2009)

New Zealander
Epalahame Lauaki (until 2008)

Queenslander
Steve Price (until 2008)

New Zealander
Jerome Ropati (until 2009)

New Zealander
Malo Solomona (until 2009)

Queenslander
Michael Witt (until 2009)
Captains
Coaches
Individual Records
'1995-2007
★ '
'Most Games'
'Most Tries'
'Most Tries in a Season'
'Most Points'
'Most Points in a Season'
'Most Points in a Match'
| Points | Player | Details |
|---|
| 28 | Ivan Cleary | 1 try, 12 goals vs Northern Eagles, 2002 (Won 68-10) |
| 28 | Gene Ngamu | 3 tries, 8 goals vs North Queensland, 1996 (Won 52-6) |
| 22 | Tony Martin | 1 try, 9 goals vs South Sydney, 2006 (Won 46-14) |
| 22 | Tony Martin | 1 try, 9 goals vs South Sydney, 2006 (Won 66-0) |
| 20 | Ivan Cleary | 1 try, 8 goals vs North Queensland, 2002 (Won 50-20) |
| 20 | Francis Meli | 5 tries vs Canterbury Bulldogs, 2003 (Won 48-22) |
| 20 | Michael Witt | 2 tries, 6 goals vs Penrith Panthers, 2007 (Won 54-14) |
Club Records
Biggest Wins
Biggest Losses
Most Consecutive Wins
★ '8', (
Round 7 - Round 14, 2002)
Most Consecutive Losses
★ '7', (
Round 20, 2004 - Round 1, 2005)
★ '7', (
Round 17 - Round 23, 2000)
Biggest Comeback
Recovered from a 20-point deficit.
★ Trailed Newcastle 20-0 after 39 minutes to win 30-26 at EnergyAustralia Stadium on April 17, 2005
Worst Collapse
Surrended a 16-point lead (twice).
★ Led Newcastle 16-0 after 34 minutes to lose 36-26 at Mt Smart Stadium on March 16, 2003
★ Led Canterbury 16-0 after 21 minutes to lose 22-18 (in extra-time) at Telstra Stadium on July 9, 2006
Golden Point Record
Played 5: Won 1, Lost 3, Drawn 1
★ Won 31-30 vs South Sydney Rabbitohs,
Round 16, 2003
★ Lost 26-28 vs North Queensland Cowboys,
Round 15, 2004
★ Lost 29-30 vs Canberra Raiders,
Round 20, 2004
★ Lost 18-22 vs Canterbury Bulldogs,
Round 18, 2006
★ Draw 31-31 vs Sydney Roosters,
Round 21, 2007
'All Time Premiership Record'
| Games | Won | Lost | Drawn | Win Percentage | Points For | Points Against | Points Differential |
|---|
| 313 | 147 | 161 | 5 | 46.96% | 6,788 | 6,907 | -119 |
See also
★
National Rugby League
★
Rugby league in New Zealand
External links
★
New Zealand Warriors Official site
★
NRL New Zealand Warriors site
★
RL1908.com Club History
★
Daily Telegraph - NZ Warriors 2007 season feature
Notes
1. The Warriors were deducted four points for salary cap breaches. Had they not been deducted these points, they would have finished in eighth place