Tonight, Simon Mannering breaks the record for most Warriors appearances with his 262nd game when they take on the Dragons.
This is the same Mannering who has been labelled a poor leader and overrated by some of the club's own fans.
The criticism cut so deep that Mannering admitted to me a few years back that he seriously considered leaving the fish bowl of Auckland and moving to Sydney.
Then he could play without the barbs and accusations that he is part of the reason the Warriors aren't a tough, winning football side. That's laughable.
Ask any opposing coach for their thoughts on Mannering and the reaction is the same.
They'd take him any day of the week.
Why? Because stats don't lie. His tackle count on a weekly basis is ridiculous. His consistency is the same.
You know what you get with Mannering: 80 minutes of relentless grind.
As we've seen with his reluctance to captain this side, Mannering is not an extrovert, he's not flashy, he's not going to break the line and run 80 metres.
Maybe that's where his critics come from.
But he is a Warrior in every sense of the word. Give me 13 Mannerings and I reckon you would not see the limp performances of recent years.
Tonight he makes history in a team that has constantly let him down. So let's hope the Warriors repay Mannering with a performance he deserves.
What I learnt this week
Professional sport is still about winning at all costs, even if it means risking your long-term health.
The concussion debate raged again, with the NRL imposing massive fines on three clubs allowing players to stay on the pitch when they were in no fit state to do so.
The clubs are fighting the penalties and good luck to them.
The most honest assessment of this issue came from a couple of current players on Fox Sports.
Aaron Woods from the Tigers and Bulldog James Graham admitted clubs are intentionally creating "false" head knocks for their forwards at key times in the match to give them a much-needed rest and gain a free interchange.
Isn't that a great look for the game? Also, what does that say about some of the coaches?
As NRL chief executive Todd Greenberg pointed out, when you make a change to force clubs into doing the right thing, a new problem generally ensues.
The only logical solution is independent doctors.
Clubs were given their chance to show a genuine duty of care to young men who still believe staying on the field after a serious head knock is a sign of toughness.
On that count, they have largely failed.
The Tiger Woods Book
It¹s 20 years since Tiger Woods took to the most famous golf course on the planet and tore it to pieces.
The brutality with which he went about his lifelong mission of winning the Masters almost defied belief.
A 21-year-old does not win the Masters by 12 shots, certainly not after he shot 40 on the front nine of his opening round and certainly not at his first attempt as a professional.
Tiger Woods had arrived. Golf changed forever.
Tomorrow, his new book Unprecedented hits the shops. It's Tiger's take on that victory, his life and a brief overview of how his life came crashing down in 2009.
I was cynical when the publishers fired me through a copy. We know Tiger is not exactly generous on the sharing front.
Initially, I was disappointed. But as I read on, I started to form a new appreciation of Woods and understand why this global sporting phenomenon often comes across as cold, thoughtless and, in his words, "entirely selfish".
What I found fascinating was the much talked about mental strength of Tiger. He and his father Earl had a code word.
If things went too far, Tiger just had to utter that word and Earl would stop. Never once did Tiger ask for mercy.
What I learnt this week is that Tiger Woods' life has never been what you'd call normal.
Not even close. He's a lone wolf in a world that just wanted more of him.
As Tiger sums it up, he's a hunter, driven by the thrill of competition; a cold-blooded sporting assassin.