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The Dolphins were in control — until they weren’t.
Leading by 12 and dictating the contest, they looked set to own ANZAC Day in Wellington. Instead, one second-half swing flipped everything, as the Warriors stormed home to snatch a 20–18 win in Round 8 of the 2026 NRL Telstra Premiership at Hnry Stadium.
It wasn’t a game the Dolphins were outplayed in.
It was a game they didn’t finish.

Fast start, then Dolphins take over
The Warriors struck first through Alofiana Khan-Pereira, but the Dolphins quickly took control — and did it decisively.
Herbie Farnworth got them on the board before Jamayne Isaako exploded into the game, scoring twice in quick succession and converting both to push the visitors out to an 18–6 lead.
They were winning the ruck, forcing errors, and turning pressure into points. At 18–6, it felt like control.
Warriors stay in the fight
The response came through persistence.
Dallin Watene-Zelezniak finished down the edge to cut the margin, before Khan-Pereira struck again — his second of the night — to bring it back to 18–14.
Two missed conversions kept the Dolphins ahead, but the momentum had shifted. The Warriors were finding metres, building pressure, and forcing the game back into a contest before halftime.
Second half stalls — then snaps
After a first half full of points, the second turned into a grind.
Errors, penalties, and broken sets slowed everything. Both sides had chances, neither could take them. The game sat at 18–14, waiting for someone to break it.
That moment came just after the hour.
The play that decided it
Taine Tuaupiki sliced through from close range in the 62nd minute — the only try of the second half, and the matchwinner.
But it wasn’t just the try.
In the same movement, Tom Flegler shot out of the line and collected Ali Leiataua high, knocking the centre out of the contest in an off-the-ball collision. Tuaupiki dummied to the contact and went through untouched.
The aftermath tipped the game.
Flegler was sent to the sin bin for the off-the-ball contact, leaving the Dolphins short at 18–18 just as the Warriors had broken through.
Boyd converted. 20–18.
Lead reclaimed. Momentum locked.
Final minutes: one shot, no finish
The Dolphins had their chances late.
Territory came. Pressure built. But composure didn’t.
Errors crept in, kicks didn’t land, and the final play fell to Isaako — a long-range two-point field goal attempt to steal it.
It missed. The Warriors closed it out.
The flip
This was a game the Dolphins let slip.
An 18–6 lead, control through the middle, and enough chances to extend. But the second-half stall, the sin bin, and one decisive defensive lapse flipped it.
For the Warriors, it was timing. They stayed within reach, struck once, and made it count.
Three straight wins, back near the top of the ladder, and a performance built on patience and timing — they didn’t need control, just the moment.
For the Dolphins, it’s the fine margin that hurts.
They built the lead, controlled long stretches, and had chances to shut it down. But the game turned on one sequence — and from there, they couldn’t land the finishing blow.
That’s the difference right now.
Not effort. Not structure. Execution when it matters.
Published 25-April-2026

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