"We finished fifth and thought we might get a couple of bites at the cherry, but you have to win to progress."
The longest serving player in the Warriors' present squad, Hohaia will have extra reason for wanting the club to get beyond their first playoff hurdle.
Win next weekend and the 28-Test Kiwi will get one last chance to play at Mt Smart Stadium, his home ground for the past 10 years.
"Of course, I'd love to be out here again in two weeks," he said.
"It doesn't matter who we play or where we play, I still want to be playing in a month's time."
The match against the Cowboys was Hohaia's 181st appearance for his only club and and he also grabbed one of the side's three tries to take his career tally to 56.
Skipper Simon Mannering also hasn't forgotten how the Warriors' campaign ended last September.
Losing on the Friday night and then enduring an agonising wait before their fate was finally sealed was "a funny way to finish".
"Definitely we felt there was a lot more football in us, but we didn't get the chance to show it," he said.
"It's not something you want to repeat."
Mannering agreed with coach Ivan Cleary's assessment that the Warriors - who over the past five weeks have faced four finals-bound sides - were battle-harden and ready to go.
"It's been a good test and we've played some quality sides," he said.
"It was important for us to play well against the Cowboys and get the result to go into next week with something to build on."
- AAP