Then there was last week's shocker in Brisbane, and we won't even get started on the entire 2009 season.
The question of how we judge Cleary will be front and centre should his six-year reign as Warriors coach end with another finals failure against the Tigers in Sydney tonight.
There's no doubt the club is a much more solid, robust entity than it was pre-Cleary. His work in helping establish the Warriors as a consistently credible force should never be undervalued.
Pre-Cleary the Warriors had their moments, but they also flirted with being a national embarrassment on a regular enough basis.
Four finals appearances in six years is good going by NRL standards. Just ask John Cartwright, John Lang or Matt Elliott. But under Cleary, the Warriors have won just two of seven finals matches. In the big games, they've frequently wilted.
That's been the theme of a season that began with a choke in front of a big crowd at Eden Park, while crucial regular-season matches against the Tigers, Broncos and Dragons all ended in hard luck defeats.
The gritty final-round victory over the Cowboys suggested the team might have turned a corner, but if they did, it led smack into a brick wall.
Last week's humiliation was pretty much same old, same old from the Warriors under Cleary.
Now, they have just one more chance to get it right.
Cleary has never asked to be judged on the big games. That may be a good thing. If his Warriors don't win tonight, such a judgment might be harsh.