Andrew Webster believes his Warriors will discover where they stand in round five after already claiming the most successful start to a coaching tenure in the club's history.The Warriors can take their fourth win in five games to open the season on Sunday against Cronulla; a feat the club has only produced twice before - in 2018 and 2003.The team's 3-1 start under Webster is the best of any of the club's 15 coaches, and gives genuine hope they can turn their fortunes around after one finals appearance since 2011.Their round-three win over North Queensland was their first in Australia in 11 months, while Webster's men entered this weekend in the top four.But the task has been made tougher with the late withdrawal of skipper Tohu Harris, after the star forward failed to recover from a knee injury.Manly recruit Dylan Walker has shifted into lock in his absence."It's a marathon. We have to keep going. We have a long way to go," Webster said."The front office is very ambitious, that's why I wanted to come here."The new players have come in hungry and want to win. They're not here for a pay cheque."You have some players coming home and they want to do their family and area proud. And then you have players who were here who say, 'I don't want this any more'."Webster is aware this week will give him a marker on how far his side has come.The Sharks loom as one of the NRL's most dangerous teams with Nicho Hynes at halfback, with Webster desperate for his side not to make life hard on themselves after making a habit of piggyback penalties and slow starts."It's going to be the biggest game for all clubs this week," Webster said.
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