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Finals Team Update: Walker in

Versatile Dylan Walker moves into the halves to replace the unavailable Shaun Johnson for the One New Zealand Warriors’ week one NRL finals encounter with defending premier Penrith at BlueBet Stadium tomorrow night (4.05pm kick-off local time; 6.05pm NZT).

An experienced finals campaigner, Walker has been predominantly used off the bench in the middle of the field in his first year with the club but he had four starts at standoff earlier in the season and has covered the position on other occasions.

He played extensively in the halves earlier in his career with South Sydney and especially with Manly Warringah.

With Johnson (calf) declared a non-starter yesterday, Walker takes on the responsibility in the halves again only this time with Martin as his partner.

Martin, making his third appearance in his comeback from a broken fibula, is familiar with Bluebet Stadium after kick-starting his NRL career with 13 appearances for Penrith in 2016 and 2017.

Other than the match against the Dolphins when he was among a number of first-choice players rested, this is the only match Johnson has missed this season; He was on the field for all but 22 minutes of the first 23 games of the campaign.

Team Lists

Backs

  • Fullback for Panthers is number 1 Dylan Edwards
    Fullback for Warriors is number 1 Charnze Nicoll-Klokstad
  • Winger for Panthers is number 2 Sunia Turuva
    Winger for Warriors is number 2 Dallin Watene-Zelezniak
  • Centre for Panthers is number 4 Stephen Crichton
    Centre for Warriors is number 3 Rocco Berry
  • Centre for Panthers is number 21 Luke Garner
    Centre for Warriors is number 4 Adam Pompey
  • Winger for Panthers is number 5 Brian To'o
    Winger for Warriors is number 5 Marcelo Montoya
  • Five-Eighth for Panthers is number 6 Jack Cogger
    Five-Eighth for Warriors is number 14 Dylan Walker
  • Halfback for Panthers is number 7 Nathan Cleary
    Halfback for Warriors is number 6 Te Maire Martin

Forwards

  • Prop for Panthers is number 8 Moses Leota
    Prop for Warriors is number 8 Addin Fonua-Blake
  • Hooker for Panthers is number 9 Mitch Kenny
    Hooker for Warriors is number 9 Wayde Egan
  • Prop for Panthers is number 10 James Fisher-Harris
    Prop for Warriors is number 10 Mitchell Barnett
  • 2nd Row for Panthers is number 11 Scott Sorensen
    2nd Row for Warriors is number 11 Jackson Ford
  • 2nd Row for Panthers is number 12 Liam Martin
    2nd Row for Warriors is number 12 Marata Niukore
  • Lock for Panthers is number 13 Isaah Yeo
    Lock for Warriors is number 13 Tohu Harris

Interchange

  • Interchange for Panthers is number 14 Tyrone Peachey
    Interchange for Warriors is number 15 Jazz Tevaga
  • Interchange for Panthers is number 15 Lindsay Smith
    Interchange for Warriors is number 16 Bayley Sironen
  • Interchange for Panthers is number 16 Spencer Leniu
    Interchange for Warriors is number 17 Josh Curran
  • Interchange for Panthers is number 17 Zac Hosking
    Interchange for Warriors is number 18 Freddy Lussick

Reserves

  • Replacement for Panthers is number 18 Jaeman Salmon
    Replacement for Warriors is number 20 Taine Tuaupiki

Match Officials

  • Referee: Adam Gee
  • Touch Judge: Dave Munro
  • Touch Judge: Chris Sutton
  • Senior Review Official: Ashley Klein

Last updated:

Front rower Bunty Afoa moves onto the interchange while Johnson, prop Tom Ale and winger Edward Kosi are the three players omitted from the initial 22-man squad. Hooker Freddy Lussick and fullback Taine Tuaupiki are retained in the game day 19.

A key feature of the line-up for the club's first play-off since 2018, is the inclusion of the energetic Jazz Tevaga on the interchange.

Tevaga, who turned 28 on Monday, returns after missing the last three games of the regular season with a hamstring injury picked up in the round 24 win over the Wests Tigers in Hamilton.

It was only his second match back in a season in which the livewire middle forward has been limited to just eight appearances.

Making a delayed start in round three following offseason surgery, he put together a run of six games before a calf injury in the Anzac Day clash against Melbourne sidelined him for more than three months. Of the eight matches he has played in the Warriors have won six.

After being used from the interchange in his last outing against St George Illawarra, second rower Jackson forward returns to the starting line-up with Josh Curran going back to the bench.

The match-up is a repeat of the One New Zealand Warriors’ last finals match in week one of the 2018 play-offs but both sides were then in the bottom half of the top eight, the fifth-placed Panthers beating the eighth-placed Warriors 27-12.

The One New Zealand Warriors have four survivors from that match in their 2023 squad in middle forwards Tohu Harris, Tevaga and Afoa plus Johnson.

Also involved in that contest was Dallin Watene-Zelezniak who was the Panthers’ fullback then but comes back to his original NRL club as the One New Zealand Warriors’ runaway leading try scorer this year.

Of the Penrith side fielded on September 8, 2018, those who remain are centre Tyrone Peachey, halfback Nathan Cleary, back rower Isaah Yeo and front rowers James Fisher-Harris and Moses Leota.

The Warriors have a third ex-Penrith player in 106-game hooker Wayde Egan, who made 29 appearances for the Panthers in 2018 and 2019.

 
 
 
 
 
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Since the 2019 season, the Panthers have set the benchmark in the NRL, playing in three consecutive grand finals and winning the last two in 2021 and 2022 while wrapping up the 2023 minor premiership yet again last weekend.

The two teams met only once in the 2023 regular season, the Panthers winning a tough and controversial Magic Round contest 18-6 at Suncorp Stadium on May 6.

After that defeat the One New Zealand Warriors went on a run which netted 11 wins from 13 matches before losing to the Dolphins when they fielded a combination missing a host of frontline players.

This is the ninth finals campaign in the Warriors’ history, only the third time they’ve been in the top four.  

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The New Zealand Warriors honour the mana of the Indigenous peoples of Aotearoa, Australia and the Pacific. We acknowledge the traditional kaitiaki of the lands, elders past and present, their stories, their traditions, their mamae and their mana motuhake.

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