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Warrior's Brent Tate
New Zealand Warrior Brent Tate expects to have a little
extra to look out for when he marks Manly's Steve Matai in the
National Rugby League (NRL) preliminary final on Saturday
night.
The clash of the two international centres is one of the
feature match-ups at the Sydney Football Stadium, with
Kangaroo Tate showing plenty of pre-match respect for his
Kiwi opponent.
"He's such a tough competitor and he doesn't do anything by
halves," he said.
"He's probably one of the most physical centres you'll play
against. I just remember tackling him when we played Manly
here thinking how hard he runs the ball and how strong he
is."
Tate said Matai had added another string to his bow and that
made him an even more difficult opponent to contain.
"The great thing about Steve is he has brought a lot more to
his game this year with his footwork," he said.
"He is starting to score a lot of tries with his footwork and
his speed."
Tate himself has had a more than decent first year with the
Warriors, after seven seasons and a premiership ring with
Brisbane.
The Queensland State of Origin representative heads the
club's statistics in offloads (36) and with runs with the
ball (337), and is near the top in other categories.
Although he didn't feel he had quite got his zip back after
returning from a knee injury at the start of the season, he
made the shortlist for Warriors' player of the year, an
accolade that went for second rower Simon Mannering.
Tate confessed that, midway through the year, he didn't
believe the then-struggling Warriors would get to their
present situation of being one match away from a grand final
appearance.
"But to the guys' credit, we've really rallied and we're a
pretty close-knit group," he said.
"We've dug deep and we've put ourselves in a really good
position."
With four victories in a row and 10 in their past 12 matches,
the Warriors had managed to build vital momentum at the right
time of the campaign, Tate said.
"You have to be winning games going into the finals and we've
been lucky to do that," he said.
"We're a team that, when we're having fun, we're dangerous,
and we've been doing that the past few weeks."
The year has been a big for Tate off the field as well, with
the birth of his first child, son Kyden.
He said being a father had helped him to get away from the
hype associated of football.
There was also a new perspective when he watched former club
Brisbane go down in a gut-wrenching last-minute 16-14 defeat
to Melbourne last weekend.
It was "a horrible way" to get eliminated and he had never
seen Brisbane skipper Darren Lockyer as cut up as he was
immediately after the Storm's Greg Inglis scored the killer
try.
However, despite his length of service with the Broncos, Tate
didn't feel any additional emotion himself about the result.
"No, that's a part of my life that's over now," he said.
"I'm 100 percent a Warrior now. The only concern I've got is
how we're going."