The Kerryman (South Kerry Edition)

Lakers denied home court advantage

- EAMONN KEOGH Neptune Stadium, Cork

NATIONAL LEAGUE CUP QUARTER-FINAL Scotts Lakers 85 IT Carlow 89

DESPITE losing a closely contested game, Scotts Lakers league cup quarter final clash with IT Carlow in Cork on Monday will be remembered for events that happened off the court in the lead up to this fixture.

As Division 1B winners Scotts Lakers had earned the right of home advantage against Carlow (fourth place in Division 1A) and this was fixed for Killarney Sports Centre on Sunday at 5.30 pm. However Carlow withdrew from fulfilling the fixture on Sunday morning claiming that adverse weather and snow conditions made it too difficult to travel. Basketball Ireland readily accepted their decision despite the fact that Dublin Lions travelled to Killorglin on the same day and the Carlow senior football team managed to make the journey to Belfast.

Under Basketball Ireland rules, when a League fixture is to be reschedule­d, the home team must offer their opponents three alternativ­e dates. With Killarney Sports Centre unavailabl­e on Monday, Scotts Lakers offered Carlow several other options to play the match in Killarney this week. All options were rejected.

When Carlow refused to accept the offers, Basketball Ireland fixed the match for Neptune Stadium Cork on Monday at 3pm. The governing body also stated that if Scotts Lakers refused to give up home advantage and play in Cork, the match would be awarded to Carlow. The Killarney side reluctantl­y agreed to play the match in Cork rather than give a walkover and having experience of the difficult appeals process in Basketball Ireland that rarely gives any satisfacti­on.

Within a matter of hours, Scotts Lakers had been stripped of home advantage and the opportunit­y of playing in front of an estimated crowd of 600 people in the final home game of the season. The new scenario was playing in front of less than 30 people in an empty Neptune Stadium in a match that was fixed at short notice.

How a governing body that prides itself as a national sports organisati­on that claims to promote and develop basketball in Ireland facilitate­d this situation to develop is farcical, unjustifia­ble and reprehensi­ble.

The game itself started brightly for Scotts Lakers and they led 15-11 at an early stage and were 27-20 in front at the end of the first quarter. The Killarney side stayed in front to lead 45-40 at half time but Carlow enjoyed a productive third quarter to take the advantage, 59-62, at the end of the third quarter.

The Lakers trailed by 10 with 6.47 remaining but had a late rally to claw it back to 74-80 with 43 seconds left before narrowing it to just a single basket, 82-84, with 13 seconds left.

Carlow went six points clear again before a huge three-pointer from Antuan Bootle cut it to 85-88 with four seconds remaining. However, it was too late and Carlow held on to win a match that will be remembered for all the wrong reasons.

In any sporting decider, a team can accept being beaten by the better team on the day and Carlow won the match to advance to the semi-final. Certain factors can go against teams and these are often accepted too as part of the game. Inconsiste­nt and questionab­le refereeing decisions is under scrutiny in every sport. Referees have a thankless job and teams just accept the mistakes and hope that matters will even out over the course of a game or the season.

Scotts Lakers didn’t enjoy too many of the officials calls on Monday and the stats figures tell their own story. Carlow had a total of six fouls called against them in the entire 40 minutes compared to 19 fouls called against Scotts Lakers.

Unfortunat­ely this is part of the game and inconsiste­ncy can often occur. Last week, some observers would suggest that Lakers appeared to benefit from some questionab­le officials calls in the match against Kilkenny in the final quarter. The foul count that night was 27 against Kilkenny and 20 on Lakers.

To win any match, a team has to beat the opposition and hope that the foul count is favourable and consistent. Scotts Lakers may have come up short here and would accept that on any day, but having to deal with frustratin­g decision making by Basketball Ireland officialdo­m just makes the situation so dishearten­ing and demoralisi­ng.

St. Paul’s Basketball Club and Scotts Lakers will feel that their huge efforts to promote national league basketball deserve better. The biggest crowds at any national league venue have been at Killarney Sports Centre all season. Indeed the crowds have been consistent­ly bigger than any Superleagu­e team apart from Tralee Warriors. The Killarney Sports Centre hosted a crowd of 950 people for a clash with Killorglin last October. This was a record crowd for a national league or Superleagu­e game in the history of Killarney basketball.

If the home game had gone ahead last Sunday or any other day this week, Scotts Lakers may not have brought in 950 again but an estimated crowd of 600 plus would have turned up for the knockout last home game of the season. Instead of playing before a crowd of 30 people in Cork, Scotts Lakers had earned the right of a home game and the opportunit­y to receive the National League shield in front of their own supporters.

Nobody can control the weather but Basketball Ireland’s decision making leaves a lot to be desired on this occasion. SCOTTS LAKERS KILLARNEY: Antuan Bootle 31, Dailian Mason 22, Dan Griffin 10, Mark Greene 8, Andrew Fitzgerald 6, Philip O’Connor 6, Dylan O’Sullivan 2

IT CARLOW: Jimmy Gordon 32, Kevin Donohoe 19, Alan O’Neill 19

 ??  ?? A crowd of less than 30 people in a near empty Naptune Stadium, Cork, on Monday when Basketball Ireland fixed the clash of Scotts Lakers and IT Carlow for a neutral venue
A crowd of less than 30 people in a near empty Naptune Stadium, Cork, on Monday when Basketball Ireland fixed the clash of Scotts Lakers and IT Carlow for a neutral venue

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