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Captain Roger Tuivasa-Sheck won't play the emotion card in the minutes leading up to the Warriors' NRL return against St George Illawarra.
Six weeks in strict Auckland lockdown and four weeks of insular preparation in Australia will end for the competition nomads when they run onto Central Coast Stadium on Saturday.
Tuivasa-Sheck, one of the NRL's premier players, reckons the sacrifice of leaving families at home won't be mentioned in the dressing sheds. It will be a more pragmatic message.

"We'll tap into all the hard work that we've put in so far. Emotions, we've all left that behind and we're here to do a job now," he said.
"I'm proud of how everyone's turned up, there hasn't been any complaining at all from the players and staff. They've done what they've needed to do to get this competition back on."
There's little room for either team to ease their way back into form. After finishing 2019 in the bottom four, both clubs lodged 0-2 records before the COVID-19 shutdown in March.
Since then, the demands placed on the Warriors has earned them praise and empathy in Australia, along with a keen following in New Zealand. A team often maligned by Kiwi sport fans because of their modest history of results, they can expect a substantial television audience back home.
Captain Roger Tuivasa-Sheck won't play the emotion card in the minutes leading up to the Warriors' NRL return against St George Illawarra.
Six weeks in strict Auckland lockdown and four weeks of insular preparation in Australia will end for the competition nomads when they run onto Central Coast Stadium on Saturday.
Tuivasa-Sheck, one of the NRL's premier players, reckons the sacrifice of leaving families at home won't be mentioned in the dressing sheds. It will be a more pragmatic message.

"We'll tap into all the hard work that we've put in so far. Emotions, we've all left that behind and we're here to do a job now," he said.
"I'm proud of how everyone's turned up, there hasn't been any complaining at all from the players and staff. They've done what they've needed to do to get this competition back on."
There's little room for either team to ease their way back into form. After finishing 2019 in the bottom four, both clubs lodged 0-2 records before the COVID-19 shutdown in March.
Since then, the demands placed on the Warriors has earned them praise and empathy in Australia, along with a keen following in New Zealand. A team often maligned by Kiwi sport fans because of their modest history of results, they can expect a substantial television audience back home.
