But the Warriors have traditionally done well against the Storm. They should have beaten them in Melbourne on Anzac Day, ruined their title hopes in 2011 and dented them in 2008.
They have recorded the second-most wins by any club over the Storm behind the Bulldogs and 12 of the 15 clashes between these two sides at Mt Smart have been decided by 10 points or less.
The Warriors also go into the game on the back of six wins in their last seven.
They didn't play well against the Wests Tigers last weekend but did enough in trying circumstances (they were coming off the bye and it was Benji Marshall's last game at Sydney's Leichhardt Oval, a venue they have traditionally struggled at) to win 24-14.
A lot of it was down to halfback Shaun Johnson, who collected 16 points and who has aspirations to be as influential as some of the players he will come up against on Sunday.
The Warriors have three former Storm players in their ranks - Todd Lowrie, Dane Nielsen and Nathan Friend - and for Lowrie it's a game he's looking forward to. Not because it's against his old club but because of what it represents.
"I think it's a good game for us at the moment, to play a top side," he said. "While we want to win every one, you want to know you are capable of playing the good sides who are going to be around in September. There's no point just getting there and being bundled out straight away, you want to know you can compete with the good sides. It's irrelevant who we are playing [this weekend], we need to win."