Storm remain undefeated in atrocious conditions with win over Warriors

By Scott Pryde / Expert

The Melbourne Storm were at their clinical best in atrocious conditions at Mount Smart Stadium, picking up a 16-point victory over the New Zealand Warriors to remain undefeated.

After playing in similar conditions and beating the Canterbury Bulldogs at Belmore last week, the Storm again showed why they have been so consistent for such a long time, grinding the Warriors into the dirt and playing high-quality football for the entire 80 minutes.

The difference between the sides appeared to be exactly that – the Warriors were well and truly in the battle during the first half, but were out-muscled during the second and didn’t trouble the scorers for the entirety of the second 40.

Of course, the way Cooper Cronk played has a large influence on the result as well. His kicking game was fantastic, using the weather to his advantage and while Shaun Johnson matched him for the first half, the Warriors were tricked into trying to beat the Storm at their own game and found out it simply doesn’t work like that.

The Warriors forward pack, led by Simon Mannering and Jacob Lillyman held their own in the first half, but again they were pushed under by the dominance of Melbourne in the second who put in a complete team effort.

With Cameron Smith leading the way from dummy half, going past 2,000 career points and kicking a brilliant 40/20, the Storm were always going to be hard to beat.

They came flying out of the starter’s blocks as well, taking just seven minutes for Kenneath Bromwich to get the opening try off a wonderful kick from Cooper Cronk.

Melbourne were then disallowed a try off another Cronk kick with the chasers ruled to be offisde, and it took no time at all for the Warriors to make them pay and take the lead.

The first of those tries came to Tuimoala Lolohea after a long play that saw a kick to the left, the ball kept alive and then an Ata Hingano kick allowing Lolohea to stroll over in the corner.

It was the very next set as Shaun Johnson crossed the line and became the leading New Zealand Warriors point-scorer of all time. It was a strong set after point, but with Addo-Carr dropping a kick from Johnson, Solomone Kata took the advantage, found Johnson and set him up for the try in the corner.

Melbourne got themselves back into the lead 15 minutes from halftime with Cheyse Blair scoring off a Cronk grubber that Lolohea couldn’t hold.

The conversion from Cameron Smith took him past 2,000 career points and put the Storm in front at halftime.

The conditions eased during the second half, but it didn’t help the hosts as many thought it might have with the Storm marching up the field and extending their lead just a few minutes in with Suliasi Vunivalu scoring.

There were no points for quite some time after, with the Storm denied a try for an obstruction but dominating the game nonetheless. Cameron Smith extended the lead to ten kicking a penalty goal 16 minutes from time before the clock became an enemy for the Warriors as they struggled to mount any sort of attack.

They were a tired looking team during the last ten minutes and Craig Bellamy’s men would find a way to cap it off with another try for the Cooper Cronk, set up by an inside ball from Smith to Munster.

In the end, the Storm remain undefeated with a dominant 80 minutes while the Warriors will now turn their attention to the Bulldogs next Friday night. The Storm take on the Broncos in the Round 3 opener.

Match Statistics

Tries: Warriors (2), Storm (4)
Conversions: Warriors (1/2), Storm (4/4)
Penalty goals: Warriors (0/0), Storm (1/1)
Possession: Warriors (49%), Storm (51%)
Completions: Warriors (31/36), Storm (35/42)
All runs: Warriors (172), Storm (169)
All run metres: Warriors (1337), Storm (1472)
Line breaks: Warriors (1), Storm (4)
Offloads: Warriors (5), Storm (10)
Tackles: Warriors (345), Storm (364)
Missed tackled: Warriors (33), Storm (17)
Penalties: Warriors (8), Storm (8)
Errors: Warriors (8), Storm (7)

Final score

New Zealand Warriors 10
Melbourne Storm 26

The Crowd Says:

2017-03-11T00:44:32+00:00

Albo

Guest


As long as Smith & Cronk are playing the Storm could pick another dozen battlers from a pick up game in the Domain at lunchtime and have enough to record NRL wins. Their on field control of the game is just beyond most other teams. Once again the Warriors missed the boat and once RTS was gone the result was never in doubt. Despite big 80 minute efforts from Simon Mannering & Bunty Afoa the rest of the Warriors were struggling to keep their feet and keep up with the play. Guys like Lolohea and Shaun Johnson should have had more impact in those conditions but once again failed to contribute except with errors. Just another day at the office for Smith & Cronk got the job done.

2017-03-10T22:56:01+00:00

Joe

Roar Rookie


I thought the defensive effort from the Storm was just too good. The kicking game of Coope Cronk was fantastic in the wet. The new boys in the team really did well, Joe Stimson and Vincent Leilua didn't let the Storm down. This was a forward pack missing Tohu Harris and Jessie Bromwich and they did very well against the Warriors. I also thought the two centers played a big role taking the ball up and defending very well. Cheyse Blair has gone a step up from last year which is very good to see. Another Bellamy project come good. Vunivalu picking up from last year with a try in the first two games of the year. Riley Jacks is coming along very nicely, Bellamy made the right choice going with him instead of Croft. He plays with a wise head and is a big body in defense and I expect if he continues along this trajectory will be very hard to leave him out of the team.

2017-03-10T22:48:13+00:00

Joe

Roar Rookie


Yes, I thought it was a joke as well. The ref gave the try and the two NZ commentators both thought it was a try. The lead runner ran right through and didn't impede anyone. Storm were too good in the end so didn't matter.

2017-03-10T20:51:36+00:00

Oingo Boingo

Guest


I thought the Worriers would give their fans a glimpse of false hope , but at this early stage of the season they aren't even capable of that .

2017-03-10T12:16:44+00:00

Stu

Guest


It was a clear obstruction. Cronk ran right behind the lead runner who drew in the centre (Thompson) which created the space out the back for Cronk. Clear shepard now and in days gone by.

2017-03-10T10:35:21+00:00

Bill larkin

Guest


That obstruction call was a joke. I'll bet we don't see another one like that all year. Storm should have won by more.

2017-03-10T09:30:48+00:00

BigJ

Roar Guru


I was watching a little of the game earlier and Warriors were up 10-6, thought that Warriors might give the Storm a scare, but the Storm came through

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