- Price backs Warriors' right to home semifinal
- Mannering voted Warriors' best player
- Warriors named unchanged line-up for eliminator
- Fittler looking forward to Auckland atmosphere
- Aussie bookies favour Warriors
- Payoff fever hits Warrior fans
- Witt confident Warriors can repeat the dose
- Warriors beat out Storm in final minutes
- Junior Warriors post season-high score
- McCaw named short term chief executive of NZRL
- Warriors in better shape than last time
- History, odds not getting Warriors down
- Orford wins NRL player of the year award
- Warriors name unchanged lineup
- Mason to miss World Cup

Price backs Warriors' right to home semifinal
17 September 2008 05:01amSkipper Steve Price has defended the National Rugby League's playoff system, saying he believes the New Zealand Warriors have earned the right to a home semifinal.
The McIntyre system has been used for the eight-team finals series for the past 10 seasons but continues to have its critics.
They point to the fact that the Warriors ended the regular season in eighth spot, but still get to host a semifinal on Friday night against the Sydney Roosters, who finished fourth.
The Roosters' defeat to Brisbane last Friday night is one half of the reason they have had to travel across the Tasman.
The other is the Warriors' feat in achieving what no other eighth-placed team had done under the McIntyre system -- beat the minor premiers in week one of the playoffs.
Their shock 18-15 result over Melbourne on Sunday handed them one last appearance at Mt Smart Stadium this year.
Price understandably had no complaints about where the Warriors found themselves.
"You earn the right, I suppose," he said of home advantage.
"The team that lost loses that right. It happened to us last year."
Twelve months ago, the Warriors were in the same situation as the Roosters are now.
The finished fourth in the minor premiership, but were beaten by Parramatta 12-10 at home in a qualifying final.
They had a second life, but had to travel to North Queensland, where they wilted in the tropical heat to go down 49-12.
