Saturday, October 11th, 2008 at 11:55 pm  |  163 responses

State Of Australian Hoops, Pt. 1

The international game is strong, and SLAMonline is ready to back it.

While SLAMonline generally focuses on basketball in the contiguous 48 states (and Toronto too!), we certainly recognize the game’s rapid international expansion. So it’s with a warm welcome that we offer the first of two two pieces regarding the state of Australian basketball.

by Todd Spehr

For the precious few who hold the distinction of being both Australian and a basketball tragic (I proudly tick both boxes) then your life is met with one simple fact: The country of your origin and the game of your devotion do not have a harmonious relationship.

So when I was asked to write a piece about the state of Aussie hoops, I was faced with a decision – write this as a credible journalist (after all, that’s what I’m striving for, right?) or write this is an angry, bitter and frustrated fan ready and willing to go Artest on those who I feel are responsible for what it has become.

All anyone needs to know is the game is at a crossroads here in Australia. Then again, it’s been at a crossroads for going on a decade. Crazy part is, our national teams are very good (the women are perennial Olympic silver medalists while the men are on the rise), more youth hoop now than ever, and FIBA has Australia ranked as the second-best basketball nation in the world (behind You Know Who) defies logic when you consider the level of despair the game is currently carrying with it in its own country.

So what’s the problem?

As the sole provider of basketball coverage in Australia, Handle Magazine editor Brad Graham has a fair idea: “The game is very healthy on the national level and at the grassroots level. It’s the in-between–the professional league–where the problems are.”

That professional league, the NBL, is so poorly configured that a reform has been created with hopes to make basketball relevant in Australia again. The Australian Sports Commission proposed reforms–highlighted by a smaller league, aggressive promotion, better sponsorships, community relations and overall structure–are a good idea. In theory. But as Graham added, “the right structure is irrelevant with the wrong people.”

The NBL turned into a How Not To manual for professional sporting organizations. They have consistently shown no foresight, no marketing plan, no relationship or connection with the community, and a stubbornness that has seen them end up on life support, complete with a shot clock.

Do we really need hindsight to see that the decision to switch the competition from winter to summer was a bad one? It was actually called by then-chairman Mal Speed “one of the league’s greatest moves.” Really? Giving fans the decision of a head-to-head of NBL vs. NBA was a good thing? Believing it could squeeze into the Aussie summer culture was wise?

While that move continues to boggle the mind, the one that possibly stings more is the NBL’s long-standing tradition of being a separate entity to each franchise under its umbrella. When the teams lost a combined $7 million in 2007, and when three folded prior to this season, the NBL was distanced.

Want more? The promotion of the game to the general public isn’t near acceptable. Unlike the NBA, the players here aren’t thrown to the people, or placed in a position where they can be worshiped. Instead, the NBL and Basketball Australia (both of which will be destroyed should the proposed reform be given the green light) seem to be stuck somewhere in the pre-millennium, oblivious to the potential relationship between modern culture and basketball that exists so well in the US.

Without doubt, the biggest indicator of this fact is the place in mainstream that both Andrew Bogut and Lauren Jackson currently occupy. Bogut, he of NCAA POY/former no. 1 pick/$72 million contract fame, has seen his impressive body of work go largely overlooked by an uninformed public. Jackson, despite perhaps being the best female baller on the planet, is known by name, but not game.

Spare a thought for Patrick Mills or Penny Taylor. Mills is by far the most exciting guard to come out of Australia in, like, forever. But it took an impressive Olympic campaign for his name to be publicly uttered, this despite a blazing freshman season at Saint Mary’s (CA). The November night he dropped 37 on Oregon should have been compulsory viewing for any hoop-dreamin’ Australian kid with a TV set, but it barely drew mention, let alone attention from a TV exec. Taylor, on the other hand, has quietly compiled a fine career overseas; the perfect compliment to Jackson on our national squad also owns a WNBA title, but not a place in the Aussie conscience.

This is where the frustration comes in. The game is fine. The people playing it are fine. As Brian Goorjian, national team coach and longtime contributor to Australian hoops said last week, “the talent’s [right now] the best it’s ever been.” Too bad, because the chasm between player and fan has perhaps never been wider.

Don’t get me wrong, this reform is a step in the right direction. But honestly, it’s hard not to be skeptical. Good intentions are still just good intentions, right? Heck, the NBL had a management overhaul eleven years ago and things became worse. Hardly the ideal track record. As Graham added: “The fans are practically saying ‘get it right so we care again!’”

As odd as it sounds, the game will survive. There will always be people here who love basketball. And there will be some, like me, who probably care too much. The ones who want to see it thrive so bad they’re willing to say anything. But it’s time things changed. Why? Because they can, and because there’s an opportunity to make things right. If they don’t, things will get worse before they get better.

  • Add a Comment
  • Share
  • RSS

Tags:

  • Sanchez

    Oval balls suck

  • andrew

    Sanchez: footy is fine. Making yourself hate sports that are more popular than basketball is only going to lead you down a path of bitterness and resentment. I love football, and I would love to see basketball give it a nudge in terms of spectator popularity. Given the choice, naturally I’d always watch or play basketball, but there is little to be gained by being overtly hostile towards other sports. America has proven that three (and sometimes four) major sports can coexist and thrive, both financially and in a more tangible fashion. Granted, we’re talking about ten times the population, but we’re not talking about thirty cities having teams, either.

    @Todd, thanks for the article. Nice job.
    @Hursty – I look forward to yours, mate. Nice work on getting published, albeit in a slightly unusual forum (and I mean that in the best of contexts).

  • http://www.stonesthrow.com/ Michael NZ

    Key point is that the product itself really is good right now. You could add Sydney or Brisbane back in and you’d still have quality squads top to bottom. And therefore good games. You don’t have to challenge the NBA for entertainment – that’s just stupid. So then, if that’s the case then why the… the… poor state? Quote “As Graham added: “The fans are practically saying ‘get it right so we care again!’” True words.
    Truth is, with the Breakers (a New Zealand team in the Aussie league) playing well, the crowds have been great, there has been a bunch of marketing on TV, radio and print so there just is no excuse for the garbage coverage, turrible website, poor marketing by the league as a whole. Bottom line: fix it fast before its too late.

  • Todd Spehr

    Good point Michael… the question is though “Is it too late?” … I mean, we’ve been hanging on for a while, have they blown it?

  • andrew

    I just can’t work out how they were able to completely fu(k up a game where there were three (!) Melbourne teams, regularly selling out a 16,000 seat arena in the mid-nineties (I’ve been to less intense NBA games than the Magic-Tigers match-ups on the mid-nineties I went to as a teenager) to me and my friends buying children’s tickets (because nobody checks them at the gates) and picking whatever seats we want to sit in at the Cage on any given night. I was at the game (I’ve said this before…) where Barlow went 14-14 from the floor (8-8 from 3), and there wasn’t even a mention of it on Fox Sports News that night, the only place where you ever get an NBL update on tv. I have to remind myself that that game even happened. 14-14 for chrissakes!

  • bubble-O-bill

    Todd, did you play in the BIG V basketball league once upon a time?

  • KayDoub

    Sorry took me a while to respond Money, I don’t play for any clubs, only in local comps at uni and stuff. But I was involved with coaching a Manly junior reps team this year.

  • andrew

    Also, Sanchez, you raise a very interesting point re: Asian superleague scenario.

    Obviously Singapore was a nightmare (props to my man Vickerman for trying!), but could a regional Asia-Pacific competition be the way forward? Obviously this would be a remarkable and costly effort, but why localise to NZ and Australia? South East Asia is already recognised by the NBA as a burgeoning market to be reckoned with (Philippines being a case in point, at least from a fan base perspective) and every other Asian kid I see in Melbourne rocking at least some form of basketball attire (tenuous evidence, I know, but every street court in Melbourne is constantly home to at least three Asian kids with a Spalding and love for the game)… It could be an entirely viable option for the richer clubs in Australia and NZ (i.e. Tigers/Dragons/Wildcats/Breakers) to join some sort of Oceania league playing top Asian teams and create a real, somewhat globalised competition. This could be a fantastic idea, and not in a Euroleague way where teams have to win to join – an actual league created for Asia Pacific. If the money’s there, the talent will be too. Singapore was a bad move, but could be oddly prescient, if not totally ill-thought out and premature.

  • Marcus

    That was an excellent article Todd. Sadly it’s going to be a very long time before the average Aussie cares about the NBL again.

  • KayDoub

    and oh…missed what you said Hursty….I’m not going to pretend I know a lot about the western sydney clubs but I guess you are right about them. I do agree the cost of playing can be a little expensive. And what I really meant was that I’d be running into a half-decent kid everytime I hit the courts in the north, but not so in the city/bondi/maroubra area, and there is really only one club around this area, being located at Alexandria, considering the population that can afford to pay for reps and stuff, I find suprising.

  • http://moneybills2cents.blogspot.com/ Money Bill Williams

    @KayDoub: Northshore boy eh
    @Andrew: There is an entire different arguement in this forum you have just stirred: local councils innefficiencies to put up street courts in most area’s. there can be the odd court, but how many do you see with a ring cut down. Or behind a 12 ft fence in a school.

  • KayDoub

    @ Money: nah actually I’m in the bondi/city area hahaha….but as i said, there lacks courts and clubs in this area, similarly, i know a couple (and i’m sure there’s more) players from this area that goes and play for other clubs like manly

  • http://moneybills2cents.blogspot.com/ Money Bill Williams

    yeah, thats what i’m talking bout- lack of hoops or hoops that are cut down by fu*king adlays. also i can’t even find a decent pair of basketball shoes in one of the top 10 most populated cities in aus

  • http://hibachi20.blogspot.com.au Hursty

    Well guys, hopefully I’ll be sending part 2 to Ryne within the week (end of the weekend) so you won’t have to wait too long.

  • andrew

    Money – I’ll contact you through the blog. I can get you hookups. Depending on size…

  • http://hibachi20.blogspot.com.au Hursty

    hahaha Money. I’ll be up in the city cos of school this week so if you wanna check out Footlocker….lmao.

  • KayDoub

    adlays? didnt kno they were all over sydney now? as for shoes….it’s terrible, you get lik 5 choices….if you are willing to pay a bit more for shipping, my mate suggested Eastbay is a great site.

  • http://hibachi20.blogspot.com.au Hursty

    Yo Money! Gotta change that link my man. Hibachi! Also Andrew I’ll put up a link in a second that you can do all that in on hibachi (click my name).

  • http://hibachi20.blogspot.com.au Hursty

    Kaydoub you are Australian right? Have you seen Town Hall in Sydney the last 5+years? Jeez.

  • Daniel

    thanks guys 4 putting this in, not much people around the world know how australia is a dedicated and exceptional basketball country, australian players are becoming much more popular overseas especially usa, thanks again, hopefully you can do a full article on this in a slam that’ll just be awesome guys

  • http://hibachi20.blogspot.com.au Hursty

    OK, Andrew, you can now talk to Money, myself and whoever else about shoes/clothing on hibachi to avoid clogging up the site here (I’m interested by what you have to say mate). Thanks.

  • http://moneybills2cents.blogspot.com/ Money Bill Williams

    Hursty i went footlocker Pitt St after we met up for hooping that day, copped myself some pretty AJ23′s low white and red (Wollongong Hawks colourway lol) yeah i’ll change that link right this sec.

    @Andrew: Yeah man that would be greatly appreciated.

    Adlays everwhere now, just go to a shop that sells nike cross trainers and dryfit shorts or nautica polo’s and you will be overwhelmed! My team that played earlier tonight is called the adlays as well so i just like that word

  • andrew

    Hursty – the link doesn’t work for me… took me to a blogspot advertorial page.

    There’s a bit of a lull on decent kicks at the moment. Eastbay is a super site for getting stuff you can’t get out here, although the exchange rate is brutalising any attempt of mine to pick up stuff cheaper than it is in Australia… Also, US$40 for shipping is tough to swallow. My advice (offered for free, no questions asked) on kicks around at the moment: steer clear of the adidas TS creator range. no cushioning, and brutal on broad feet… the Jordan CPs are one of the lightest, most cushioned shoes I’ve tried on in years, but still solid and supportive. And Hyperdunks are as astonishing as everyone says they are. Jordan Dentro/TGIM… most of the Jordan range is pretty impressive, if you can get past some of the questionable aesthetics. Just depends on what kinda cash you wanna drop…

  • andrew

    P.S. what are adlays?

  • KayDoub

    I live in SYdney, and yes I’ve seen TH lol…

  • http://hibachi20.blogspot.com Hursty

    uh yeh my bad andrew. I had an au on the end of the site. Shouldnt have been there. Fixed now.

  • http://hibachi20.blogspot.com Hursty

    You know lads? They speak fu*king pig latin and thats what ‘lad’ translates to.

  • maclovenotwar

    James Crawford!

  • http://hibachi20.blogspot.com Hursty

    Questionable aesthetics? What does that mean?
    The hyperdunks are niiice.

  • andrew

    Ah, I get it. I’ve posted on yr blog, hursty.

  • http://hibachi20.blogspot.com Money Bill Williams

    taken from urban dictionary: adlays means lad, a word used to describe a guy, usually burwood boy who wears polo tops , hat , trackies & the latest nikes.

  • andrew

    Hursty: questionable aesthetics = nice way of saying pretty ugly.

  • http://hibachi20.blogspot.com Money Bill Williams

    hurst, he means that jordans can look ugly sometimes

  • http://hibachi20.blogspot.com Hursty

    I wonder how they get the latest Nikes Money….lol. Money- whats your first post on mate? Also, doing that preview? I know Im bugging, just havent heard much back.

  • andrew

    Money – I see. We call those dudes in Melbourne fu(kheads.

  • andrew

    P.S. I couldn’t resist a really bad line there. Apologies to anyone who actually dresses like that. I’m not a hater.

  • http://hibachi20.blogspot.com Hursty

    LOTS of Jordans look ugly. Even if they feel great.

  • http://hibachi20.blogspot.com Money Bill Williams

    haven’t got a clue bout 1st post. what teams are left? F*ckheads is the right term. they keyed my car at the JB HiFi parking lot in Warrawong. they also got my mates car at Harvey Norman and stole $1200 cash under the seat the seat that he saved to get a new laptop for uni. they keyed ” Waza Boyz” on the bonnet aswell

  • http://hibachi20.blogspot.com Hursty

    Wiz, Bucks, Bulls, Cavs, Magic, Sixers. A few more teams. You can now go back through the posts since your a member and have a look yourself.

  • http://hibachi20.blogspot.com Hursty

    Im out fellas. Have a good one :)

  • andrew

    Hey, does anyone else get the sinking feeling the SLAMonline overlords just put this post up so all the freaking aussies would shut the heck up and stop hijacking all the other threats? Am I being a little too conspiracy-theorist here?

  • andrew

    threats = threads…

  • http://hibachi20.blogspot.com Money Bill Williams

    no your probably right. But at same time you can’t forget our friends over the ditch

  • William

    Wow you’ve got it right there, players willing to promote the game. But at the end of the day the league needs the money to market the game and the money will only come from either sponsorship which is unlikely because of poor attendence and the perception of the product or government funding.

  • http://shawn-kemps-offspring.blogspot.com/ TADOne

    Aussies are trying to take over.

  • http://www.gaze.com.au AL MASSEY

    As a US-based Aussie and a longtime SLAM reader, I am impressed at you guys running this. Thank you for bringing the travesty that is our league to the attention of this audience, many who consider themselves knowledgeable fans but know absolutely nothing of Aussie hoops. Believe me, the NBL may be crap but there is so much love and hope for those of us that care about the game and its success in Australia.

    My biggest gripe is the coverage. The NBL has the best bunch of players it has ever seen. Real quality play there these days. After I came over to NY/MA to play D2, many of my friends stayed and now actually play in the league – what up, Boodnkoff – its a damn shame that its impossible for us to watch anything over here. The site is a joke. My boy, with some help of friends has a nice little site going for those that don’t know. It’s only getting better too. Just needs some backing. GAZE.COM.AU check it out. Shout out to Daniel Eade.

    Anyway, a massive thanks for running this and bringing Aussie hoops into the spotlight for a few. We are grateful.

    A

  • http://www.gaze.com.au AL MASSEY

    Can’t wait for the second post!

  • paul

    I got brought to my attention a few weeks ago that 2 people are currently working at NBL headquarters. Harmison and Scott Derwin. 2 people!!! They deserve some credit for keeping the league running (allbeit in a pretty poor state) but it is also disgraceful that the league has come to this and has funds to employ 2 people at their headquarters…

  • http://www.slamonline.com Emry DowningHall

    This was a great piece Todd, well done. I’ve done work for Handle and, contributing or not, remain a big fan of the magazine. They have shown SLAM a lot of love since day 1 and Brad Graham is a true basketball guy who represents AU with a lot of integrity. I can’t speak to the play in the NBL but, from my experience AU hoops fans are a hardcore bunch, and the exposure is well warranted!

  • Todd Spehr

    Thanks Emry. I love writing for Handle, they’re about the same thing as SLAM – love of the game – and as the only hoops mag in Australia they have a big responsibility, one which Brad does very well.

Advertisement
Counterkicks