And the Storm are always formidable opponents; not just for the vast experience of Cameron Smith and Cooper Cronk, but also for their unique ability to play to the edges of the law around the ruck. The officials tonight were again guilty of some curious decisions, generally giving Melbourne much greater latitude.
The conditions, especially in the first half, were awful. Maybe not quite at the levels of the infamous All Blacks Scotland test at Eden Park in 1977, but not far away. Torrential rain had buffeted Auckland since early this afternoon, with puddles forming in both in goals.
The Storm are experts at wet weather football and predictably, made the better start, with Kenny Bromwich showed greater hunger to be first to a precise Cooper Cronk chip.
But then the Auckland side proceeded to play like only they can, exhibiting why they have retained such a loyal fan base through years of frustration. Their first try, was a marvel, given the conditions.
As they splashed in ankle deep water, the Warriors went from one side of the field to the other, with some remarkable ball control, before Tui Lolohea crossed in the corner. Soon afterwards Solomone Kata released Shaun Johnson, and the halfback stepped his way past three defenders from close range, an appropriate way to break Stacey Jones' point scoring record for the club.
But their lead didn't last long. A Cheyse Blair try - after a Lolohea slip - took the Storm back into the lead and only some impressive defence prevented further Melbourne points in the first half.
Winger Suliasi Vunivalu crossed just after halftime, leaving the Warriors with a relative mountain to climb, given the conditions, and they never looked likely.
Warriors 10 (T Lolohea, S Johnson tries; S Johnson goal)
Storm 26 (K Bromwich, C Blair, S Vunivalu, Cronk tries; C Smith 5 goals)
Halftime: 12-10