Manawatu Standard

Grant dejected by huge loss

- HAMISH BIDWELL

What message does a captain need to send in defeat?

At 6-2 down in the first quarter, the Central Pulse were always going to lose Wednesday’s national netball premiershi­p top-of-thetable clash with the Southern Steel. Even then, one team was demonstrab­ly better than the other. Only the Pulse will know if the final score of 80-44 was a fair reflection of the disparity between the two teams.

With the result a foregone conclusion, curiosity turned to how the Pulse would take it.

On that front, the body language of the beaten captain Katrina Grant was fascinatin­g. She looked utterly deflated and demoralise­d and made no attempt to hide it.

This is Grant’s seventh season as Pulse skipper. Along the way she’s become New Zealand captain as well. She is a significan­t figure who team-mates look to for their cues.

Some leaders might have clapped and cajoled and encouraged in that situation. But Grant, particular­ly after being switched to goal keep, cut a forlorn figure.

Had she still been at goal defence, there would have been a lot more involvemen­t on attack. But, stuck in her third with Steel goal shoot Jhaniele Fowler-reid, Grant just looked miserable.

In the circumstan­ces, it was exactly the right way to communicat­e to the team. ’’I wouldn’t mind sweeping it under the rug, but we have to learn from it,’’ Grant said after the defeat in Porirua.

‘‘There’s bits of it where we’ve got to be like ‘you kow what, that game was rubbish. Forget it and move on’. But the thing is that I want the girls to remember what this feels like. You need to remember how this feels so you won’t do it again.’’

Which, from her part, meant not shying away from what happened and who it happened in front of.

‘‘Friends, family, our supporters, our home. It’s hard yakka losing like that. It hurts, it hurts a lot.’’

So she let that show. Better that than some fake positivity or talk of bright sides and encouragin­g signs.

It will be interestin­g now to see how the team respond to it, when they meet the Northern Mystics in Auckland next Wednesday.

‘‘We just need to show what we’re made of and show a bit of resilience out there. We kind of just fell apart and dropped off,’’ said Grant.

The Steel boast seven good players but four or five is about all the rest of the competitio­n have, leaving them to make do with what’s on court.

‘‘Anything we tried didn’t work. Even just walking [the ball] down the court didn’t work. We just weren’t smart,’’ Grant said.

Hopefully, they’re quick learners.

 ?? PHOTO: PHOTOSPORT ?? There was no hiding the disappoint­ment of Pulse captain Katrina Grant after her team’s loss to the Steel.
PHOTO: PHOTOSPORT There was no hiding the disappoint­ment of Pulse captain Katrina Grant after her team’s loss to the Steel.

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