FRUSTRATED centre Jackson Willison says he is sick of hearing teams singing victory songs after beating Worcester Warriors.

And the New Zealander is determined to hit the right notes against Bath at Sixways on Saturday (3pm) in a bid to be blasting out their own tunes from a jubilant dressing room at Sixways.

Biyi Alo burrowed over in the final play to snatch a four-try bonus point from a 36-26 defeat at Sale Sharks last Friday.

It was the fourth time in the last five Aviva Premiership clashes Warriors have come away with points to show for their efforts.

But only two of those were victories — against Saracens and Bristol — and Willison insists his side are only interested in claiming wins.

“The message is quite clear — we have got to start playing for wins rather than the bonus points,” he said.

“We are coming up against a team full of internationals on Saturday so we need a bit of clarity around what we want to achieve.

“But as a group we want to win and we are all sick of hearing the other team singing those songs you sing when you win so hopefully we can turn it around.”

Warriors are eight points clear of basement side Bristol who lost 38-34 to Exeter Chiefs in a thriller at Sandy Park on Saturday.

But Willison said they had set their sights on catching 10th-placed Sale before Friday’s defeat at the AJ Bell Stadium.

“Tenth place was there for the taking,” he said.

“We probably had it in our sights for 60 minutes of that match.

“Sale played their game-plan to the tee so we will probably look back and be quite rightly frustrated with the fact we did not quite nail our game-plan.

“We did all the small things right. We had a game-plan and knew if we stuck to it we would get good results and for the first 20 minutes it worked. But Sale came back strongly.”

Francois Hougaard and Joe Taufete’e cancelled out a brace of tries from Sam James before Mike Haley darted over to give Sale a 21-14 lead at half-time.

A superb individual effort from Byron McGuigan increased Sharks’ advantage before Chris Pennell hit back with a try.

But Sale wrapped up the victory with an AJ MacGinty penalty and a late Ben Curry try while down to 14 men with Halani Aulika sin-binned.

Warriors kicked a lot of possession away in a bid to gain territory in the second half but Willison defended his team’s tactics.

“The kicking option is the right one,” he said.

“But you have got to be really effective with the kicking so if we look back it was not as sharp as it has been in the past.

“Sale have got a great bunch of backs so it will be the kicking game we will reflect most on and we can’t afford to give those backs those chances.”