- Orford wins NRL player of the year award
- Warriors name unchanged lineup
- Mason to miss World Cup
- Price says Warriors have right attitude
- Junior Warriors to join senior team in Melbourne
- Storm battle for Warriors
- Manu returns to Eel country - this time, to win
- Playoffs mission improbable for Warriors
- Inspired Vatuvei sees Warriors into playoffs
- Vatuvei in impressive form for must-win game
- McKinnon poorly treated - Warriors
- Warriors concentrating only on beating Parramatta
- Warriors need to step up for key match
- McKinnon backed by club after spitting allegation
- Warriors committed on getting things done

History, odds not getting Warriors down
11 September 2008 03:29pmThe New Zealand Warriors might have history and most pundits against them, but centre Brent Tate says there's a quiet confidence heading into the National Rugby League playoffs.
The Warriors travel across the Tasman tomorrow for a must-win clash on Sunday with Melbourne, the defending champions and minor premiers for the third year in a row.
No team claiming the eighth and last finals berth have got past the first week since the McIntyre system was introduced a decade ago.
Tate knows how difficult the assignment against Melbourne will be, especially as only one side, Cronulla in March, have won at Olympic Park since the Warriors managed the feat in 2006.
"Not many people are giving us much of a chance of beating Melbourne," he said.
"But we'll be quietly confident and we'll go down there and go about our business."
Tate, who is his first campaign with the Warriors after seven seasons with Brisbane, knows all about September football.
He has been involved in the playoffs in all eight years of his first-grade career, winning a premiership ring in 2006 when the Broncos beat Melbourne in the grand final.
The Kangaroo and Queensland Origin representative believed the Warriors had the talent to match any side in the competition and said the final series would be "a whole new competition".
"`We've got our destiny in our own hands," he said.
"It's a clean slate. It's finals footy and you never know what happens."
The Warriors are overwhelming underdogs to get past the Storm, with the New South Wales TAB quoting them at $5.50 to win, the longest odds for any of the eight teams in action this weekend.
But Tate noted that club had overcome the odds before.
