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Left side pairing Matt Utai and Willie Tonga tore the New Zealand Warriors apart as the Bulldogs waltzed home 54-10 in their final round National Rugby League match in Auckland.

Utai crossed for four tries, two of them set up by Tonga, as the Bulldogs toyed with a team who ended up avoiding the wooden spoon on differential.

The Bulldogs currently top the competition standings but will finish second if Sydney beats Parramatta and will host North Queensland as the finals get underway next week.

The Warriors' woeful completion rate (16 of 31 sets) contributed to the Bulldogs' first ever win at the New Zealand team's home ground.

The visitors ran in 10 tries to two, with winger Tony Martin getting the Warriors' four-pointers.

It took the Bulldogs six minutes to score, when prop Mark O'Meley crashed over and they had opened up a handy lead by the 20-minute mark with Utai's first two tries.

He had his hat-trick in the 34th minute, and a try to Sonny-Bill Williams, who was a handful all day for the Warriors, gave the visitors a 28-6 half-time lead.

Four tries in the first 20 minutes of the second half then had Warriors fans heading for the exit.

Lock Tony Grimaldi's barnstorming effort pushed the Bulldogs past the half-century mark, before Martin crossed for a consolation from a Lance Hohaia kick with seven minutes remaining.

Utai rounded out the scoring with his fourth minutes from the end.

Winger Hazem El Masri finished with 18 points from a try and seven goals for the Bulldogs, while props O'Meley and Steve Price were tireless, racking up over 400 metres between them with 20 hit-ups apiece.

Bulldogs skipper Price, signed by the Warriors for next season, was given a warm applause when he was rested midway through the second half by Coach Steve Folkes.

Acknowledgement of Country

Canterbury-Bankstown Bulldogs respect and honour the Darug and Eora nations, who are the Traditional Custodians of the land and pay our respects to their Elders past, present and future. We acknowledge the stories, traditions and living cultures of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples on the lands we meet, gather and play on.