For years Warriors fans have complained of an imaginary bias against their side by the NRL referees. I do not believe there is some sort of conspiracy in which the Australian referees are out to get the only New Zealand side in the competition. Even if there was, to put it bluntly, the Warriors are not good enough for that to be their biggest issue.
Until they stop dropping the ball at crucial moments, drifting in and out of games, lacking intensity and struggling to control matches, they have nobody to blame but themselves.
Warriors chief executive Cameron George has urged fans to show their support for the Warriors by dressing as referees and bringing whistles to their home game against the Canberra Raiders on Friday night.
I've come to expect that sort of reaction from fans, particularly on social media, but for the boss of an NRL club to come up with something that petty is a little embarrassing and, I believe, an attempt to shift focus from the team's own failures.
I'm reading a book at the moment which describes playing the victim as a form of entitlement.
Convincing ourselves we are the victims makes us feel good. It shifts the blame - the referees made the mistakes, it's not our fault, we can still feel good about what we are doing.
It is much harder, but more beneficial, to look inwards. What could we do better? What parts of our game can we work on to ensure we're in a better position next season.
I'm sure the Warriors players and coaches know that and are doing everything they can to improve. I think the fans need to get off the "referees hate us" bandwagon and be more honest with themselves.