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NBL Blitz 2023: Poor Adelaide belted by Perth

After standing down Corey Webster for an offensive social media post that disparaged the LGBTQI+ community, the Perth Wildcats belted an ‘embarrassing’ Adelaide.

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Perth ensured it avoided any potential angst with Adelaide with a late stand down of under-fire guard Corey Webster as the depleted 36ers served up an embarrassing first-quarter effort at the NBL Blitz.

It’s only the pre-season but the 36ers, off the back of conceding 101 points in a 26-point loss to New Zealand on Sunday, appeared disjointed and disinterested against Perth, looking up at a scoreboard that read 37-11 at quarter time.

The Sixers surrendered the first 11 points of the game and were down 31-4 at one point, defending like a wet lettuce leaf and turning the ball over nine times in a scene that wouldn’t look out of place on a Tuesday night rec league court.

Wildcats big man Keanu Pinder feasted inside, equalling the Sixers’ total with 11 first-quarter points as Perth’s offence produced a training drill-like 11-15 from the field at 73 per cent.

The absence of injured imports Jacob Wiley and Trey Kell didn’t help, but it was the lack of effort, desire and oftentimes basic skill that was glaring.

Webster, on Monday, was admonished by the Wildcats, NBL and the 36ers organisation over an offensive social media post that disparaged the LGBTQI+ community and, on Tuesday, was stood down from the game after apologising.

Tai Webster, brother of Corey, passes the ball during the Wildcats big win. Picture: Getty Images for NBL
Tai Webster, brother of Corey, passes the ball during the Wildcats big win. Picture: Getty Images for NBL

Big man Isaac Humphries, the league’s only openly gay player, was the sole 36er who could hold his head high in the first quarter debacle, his energy on both ends saving further embarrassment. He scored six points on 3-4 shooting — the only Adelaide field goals in the first 9.55, before Jason Cadee hit a three with five seconds left in the quarter.

To his credit, the veteran point guard took matters into his own hands in the second quarter, producing a trio of three-pointers as the Sixers hit back with a 28-26 period, but the damage had been done.

From there, it was basically a stalemate as Perth put the cue in the rack in a 112-80 result.

Cadee finished with 15 points and Humphries 14 with three blocks.

The Sixers have conceded 213 points in their two Blitz games and turned it over 45 times, leaving plenty of questions.

Will CJ Bruton stick by physically-gifted but raw 18-year-old Next Star Trentyn Flowers at point guard when it appears he is not yet ready to run a team at the elite level?

Can they win with import Jamaal Franklin’s isolation-focused offence? He scored 15 points and made a few buckets off the dribble — while his four teammates stood on the spot — but some of those attempts were, at best, questionable.

How do they get captain Mitch McCarron going? McCarron looked at sea with just one point on 0-8 shooting in 25 minutes, after a subdued six point on five shots against the Breakers.

Does anyone outside of Humphries want to muck in on defence?

For the Wildcats, Pinder dominated with 17 points in 15 minutes before resting for most of the second half, while they ran plenty of offence for the development player Michael Harris, who paced them with 18.

Both teams are in action for their last Blitz appearances Thursday, the Sixers against undefeated Tasmania, while Perth faces New Zealand.

Trentyn Flowers of the 36ers dribbles the ball under pressure from Ben Henshall of the Wildcats. Picture: Getty Images
Trentyn Flowers of the 36ers dribbles the ball under pressure from Ben Henshall of the Wildcats. Picture: Getty Images

THE NEXT STARS AND A YOUNG GUN

Adelaide started Flowers at point guard despite his ball-handling struggles against the Breakers and, while he still had turnover issues — four — the teen did show flashes of class and athleticism.

He linked up with Humphries three times and the monster dunk over fellow Next Star Alex Sarr was a reminder of his NBA potential.

Flowers, who had 11 points and six rebounds, must clean up his handle but the teen is on a development journey and he has time to hone.

Sarr finished with a solid eight points and eight rebounds and three blocks, showing the defensive ability that has NBA scouts salivating.

The Frenchman wasn’t as dominant as he was on his Blitz debut when he dropped 13 points, eight rebounds and four assists but, in fairness, Perth didn’t need a monster effort from the towering big man.

They got plenty of punch out of another highly-rated teenager in local Ben Henshall, who impressed with 17 points in 18 minutes.

DELLY EXPLODES INTO BOOMERS PARIS CALCULATIONS

Decorated Aussie basketball great Matthew Dellavedova has made no secret he’s on a mission to get to Paris.

And the NBA champion has given Boomers coach Brian Goorjian something to think about with his eye-catching early form for Melbourne United at the NBL Blitz.

After drilling 28 points in just 19 minutes against Brisbane in his first pre-season outing, Delly backed that up with a mind-boggling 17-point first-quarter ignition – in just five minutes – in an 85-71 win over Illawarra on Monday night.

Dellavedova, best-known for his elite defence and dogged effort, has developed a deadly three-point radar through two games at the Blitz — he’s drained 8-16 attempts from deep. Hey, Goorj said he needed a shooter in Okinawa, right?

Right now, it might be the smallest of sample sizes, but the bronzed Boomer has shown marked improvement on the player who helped United finish on top of the NBL22 ladder, using the motivation of his World Cup omission to transform his game at age 33.

Delly told Code Sports his rejuvenation has come about thanks to a holistic refocus on body and mind, which has produced some unexpected but pleasing results.

“I can work harder for longer, recover better and I feel a bit quicker,” Dellavedova said.

“It sounds funny, but it (being quicker) took a little bit of getting used to because I’ve always tried to play slow and more at my own pace, but it’s nice to be able to get into the paint and drive past people more.

“I’ve always worked hard and tried to eat right, but I’ve just been experimenting more with the diet and in the weightroom, always looking for an advantage.

“Eating more steak and less carbs after I’m done working out. Trying to get more sun, getting barefoot on the grass and sand, which I’ve always liked, and sleeping well.”

Matthew Dellavedova takes on the Illawarra Hawks defence. Picture: Albert Perez/Getty Images for NBL
Matthew Dellavedova takes on the Illawarra Hawks defence. Picture: Albert Perez/Getty Images for NBL

Dellavedova hasn’t spoken about missing the World Cup – and he won’t – but you can tell how much it hurt when Dellavedova was left out of the squad, which won three of five games and missed the quarter-finals, when he speaks about representing his country.

“I’ve been lucky enough to represent my country at an Olympic Games but doing that just makes you hungrier to do it again because it’s such a special, unique culture of mateship and sacrifice and just pure basketball, where everyone is doing whatever’s best for the team, competing on the world stage with some of your best mates to try to make history,” he said.

He firmly believes he can break his way back into the national team for next year’s Olympics on the back of a big season in Melbourne.

“My focus is on helping Melbourne United in any way I can, win a championship, and doing whatever I can to get to Paris, that’s a huge personal goal for me,” he said.

As soon as last Thursday, coach Dean Vickerman said the plan was to start Dellavedova alongside Kiwi star Shea Ili in the back court, but the two big nights off the bench will give the master coach some food for thought as they close in on the Throwdown season-opener against South East Melbourne on September 28.

Melbourne United 85-71 Illawarra

United: Matthew Dellavedova 20, Chris Goulding 14

Hawks: Peatling 13, Harvey 11

BLITZ INTEL: YOUNG STARS DAZZLE NBA SCOUTS

The NBA eyes taking in Perth’s NBL Blitz win over Cairns have been gifted a smorgasbord of juicy intel to feed back to their clubs about some of the best young talents on the Gold Coast.

While Next Stars and potential lottery picks Alex Sarr and Bobi Klintman were Sunday’s main attractions for scouts, rookie Taipans’ point guard Taran Armstrong put his name up in lights with a display of composure beyond his tender years and experience.

The Tassie native, who left Cal Baptist University after two seasons to begin his pro career, displayed an innate understanding of his team’s offence, pinpointing passes few players would ever contemplate in his first proper hitout in the NBL.

The 196cm playmaker, dished out a game-high seven assists to go with eight rebounds, producing an incredible stretch of pure point guard brilliance in the second quarter.

A shovel pass to the corner found fellow youngster Sam Mennenga, who missed his three-point try. A short time later, the 21-year-old showed off his brilliant vision with a delightful crosscourt feed to the impressive Lat Mayen for three.

Taran Armstrong of the Taipans is blocked by Keanu Pinder of the Wildcats. Picture: Matt Roberts/Getty Images for NBL
Taran Armstrong of the Taipans is blocked by Keanu Pinder of the Wildcats. Picture: Matt Roberts/Getty Images for NBL

Add a catapult to Jonah Antonio, who missed his try, followed by a scything penetration into the lane, where he found himself caught in the air, before he improvised to find Mayen for another trey — and a 44-42 lead.

Armstrong’s got a safe handle and has added bulk to a slender frame that was an initial knock on his potential.

The scouts didn’t have to wait long to see what Perth’s Frenchman Sarr and Cairns’ Swede Klintman were about, both showing nice flashes of the talent and physical attributes that have them high on draft radars.

While the Wildcats still haven’t announced a third import — the last available roster spot in the entire NBL — It looks like John Rillie has the confidence to play Sarr alongside Keanu Pinder in Perth’s frontline.

The 18-year-old got his first bucket of the Blitz on an athletic catch from a Pinder pass as he careened to the basket and finished, then he made something out of nothing when he picked up his dribble and was caught on the perimeter with no guard options. Instead of panicking, he faced up and calmly potted a three.

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At 216cm, Sarr clearly possesses rare gifts — he can shoot it, get in the lane, is ultra athletic, crashes the glass, has no problem putting it on the floor and even showed a flair for creating for teammates.

We’re only one game in but, with what he’s served up in Perth’s pre-season warm-ups and now a 13-point, eight-rebound, four-assist, two-block effort against Cairns, the hype gets more real with every dribble.

Klintman made a pair of free throws — after drawing the foul on Sarr — for his first points and then heard the sweet swish of twine as he made no mistake on a wide open three-point try from the corner.

The 20-year-old chose Australia over returning to college at Wake Forest with the promise of operating more on the perimeter and he did plenty of ball handling for the Taipans.

His spider-like 208cm frame, coupled with elite athleticism is going to be a huge problem for opposing teams — the Wildcats couldn’t help but foul him as he blew by, allowing him to live at the charity stripe where he shot a perfect 8-8 on his way to 14 points, five rebounds, three steals and two assists.

Klintman twice just failed to put himself in the SportsCenter top 10 when he produced a couple of incredible leaps for lobs, but could not complete the dunks.

Bobi Klintman. Picture: Matt Roberts/Getty Images for NBL
Bobi Klintman. Picture: Matt Roberts/Getty Images for NBL

The handle still needs work — he turned it over four times — but the desperation is there. At one point, Klintman lost the ball but, instead of hanging his head, he dived on the deck and made something out of nothing to give Sam Waardenburg a three-point try.

Another Wildcats teen NBA hopeful in WA native Ben Henshall looked right at home in limited minutes, using his first moment on the court to break Armstrong down with an athletic, physical drive and spin to finish at the bucket and then his floater in the lane was a thing of beauty.

At the other end of the experience spectrum, three-time NBL MVP Bryce Cotton showed why many believe he should have had a longer NBA career with a typical 22-point first half, built on a three-point play, then a four-point play to give him seven in a matter of moments to kick the game off.

A game-high 31 is standard fare for the superstar — the big league’s loss is the NBL, Perth, and Aussie hoops fans’ gain.

With Cairns captain Tahjere McCall taking on coaching duties and Bul Kuol out with a wrist injury, Adelaide-born Mayen seized his opportunity.

Mayen exploded for 17 points in 12 mins in the first half — he’s got length, athleticism and shoots it beautifully.

Against his old club, Wildcats’ masked man Pinder had eight points and eight boards, copped a knee, and found himself on the bench in the third with four fouls. He will be better for the run after an injury-interrupted pre-season.

Perth two-way wing Jordan Usher looms as one of the league’s most underrated signings. There’s been little fanfare about the Atlanta native but he’s been quietly productive throughout the pre-season, aggressively taking what he’s given on offence — his 19 a perfect foil for Cotton — while ensuring he’s an absolute pest when guarding opposing wings.

Perth is next in action against Adelaide on Tuesday, while the Taipans get an extra day’s rest, facing South East Melbourne Wednesday.

STAR 36ERS’ SIGNING FLOPS ON DEBUT

Question marks surrounding Adelaide’s signing of gifted guard Trentyn Flowers have continued after the Next Star produced an underwhelming performance in his NBL Blitz debut for the 36ers on Sunday.

Flowers, a potential 2024 first-round NBA draft pick, battled with eight points and a whopping seven turnovers in his 22-minute stint as the 36ers fell in a blowout 101-75 loss to the New Zealand Breakers.

Adelaide’s decision to play the prodigious 18-year-old at point guard has led to respected draft analysts questioning the move.

It’s widely felt that Flowers isn’t a point, which has been on display in the 36ers’ three pre-season games thus far.

The American is athletically gifted, especially in transition as a spot up three-point shooter, but he struggles with his handles and composure as the primary ball handler.

This was on show on Sunday when Adelaide again opted to start Flowers at the point against the Breakers.

Trentyn Flowers made an underwhelming debut. Matt Roberts/Getty Images for NBL
Trentyn Flowers made an underwhelming debut. Matt Roberts/Getty Images for NBL

The promising teen attempted to bring the ball up the floor in the opening minutes of the game, but fumbled and lost possession.

Flowers had three turnovers in the first quarter and zero points in his five minutes on the floor.

The 36ers reacted and briefly moved the Next Star to a wing to start the second quarter, allowing veteran Mitch McCarron to play at point guard and others including recruit Jacob Wiley at stages.

Flowers regularly reverted back to the point role in the first half before Adelaide pulled the trigger and moved him to the wing to start the second.

The American struggles continued in the third quarter, with more turnovers and clunky play handling the ball.

To his credit, Flowers showcased resilience to stay in the game and knock down a three late in the game to finish with a respectable eight points.

He looked at his most comfortable when he was playing at the wing position.

This would be his best possible position in order to succeed.

It’s also been pointed out that Adelaide already possess capable and experienced point guards in McCarron and Jason Cadee.

Trentyn Flowers had seven turnovers. Picture: Matt Roberts/Getty Images for NBL
Trentyn Flowers had seven turnovers. Picture: Matt Roberts/Getty Images for NBL

36ers import wing Jamaal Franklin also struggled, dropping eight points on three of nine shooting from the field and adding four turnovers.

Coach CJ Bruton has all but entrusted his coaching future in Flowers – a five-star recruit in the class of 2023 - hoping his new Next Star can be the second coming of Josh Giddey.

Flowers calls himself a “unicorn” because he’s a rare player at 6-foot-8 that shows flashes of handles to attack closeouts and operate in pick-and-roll situations.

The next step for him will be emerging as more of a lead facilitator in halfcourt situations.

Upon signing with Adelaide, Flowers declared his desire to play point guard.

“This was the toughest decision I’ve ever made,” Flowers said.

“Louisville was my dream college. But I feel like signing in the NBL gives me the best chance to lock in and develop my game. I’m going over there to play point guard, to learn how to run a team, and be a player like LaMelo Ball or Josh Giddey.”

Flowers had started training with Louisville in June but will now focus on a one-year stint with Adelaide as an NBL Next Star.

The 36ers next Blitz game is against Perth on Tuesday from 7.30pm (AEST).

Originally published as NBL Blitz 2023: Poor Adelaide belted by Perth

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Original URL: https://www.themercury.com.au/sport/basketball/nbl-blitz-2023-star-adelaide-36ers-signing-trentyn-flowers-flops-on-debut/news-story/8c2c891378e7c2b667a6edc02527fb67