Manawatu Standard

Cullen backs midcourt of Silver Ferns

- BRENDON EGAN

Kayla Cullen has stuck up for the Silver Ferns’ under-fire midcourt, stressing only a full team effort will get them back into the Constellat­ion Cup.

New Zealand head into tonight’s test in Adelaide with dented confidence after losing both home matches in the best-of-four series.

The Silver Ferns must beat the Diamonds in the remaining two games, and by convincing margins, to have any slim shot of reclaiming the Constellat­ion Cup for the first time since 2012.

Cullen said no-one was more annoyed about Sunday’s 60-52 loss than the players themselves, with the team only showing patches of what they were capable of.

New Zealand’s midcourt has copped plenty of criticism in the first two games being outplayed by Australian counterpar­ts Liz Watson, Kim Ravaillion and Gabi Simpson.

Not enough pressure has been applied defensivel­y with Australia finding it too easy to send the ball into star goal shoot and captain Caitlin Bassett.

On attack, the connection­s between the midcourt and shooters has at times lacked precision with possession squandered away at key stages.

Cullen, who has been used off the bench at wing defence, said they hadn’t singled out any one area of the court as letting them down. Every player wearing the black dress needed to step up their game and bring more urgency defensivel­y.

‘‘I don’t think the focus has been on the midcourt. It’s a team game and I think we haven’t

focused on centre or wing attack or wing defence or whatever.

‘‘We’re just looking at it as a team. Everyone makes mistakes, everyone does good things. We don’t really focus on one person or one position like that.’’

Centre Shannon Francois is under pressure to hold her starting spot after quiet play in the first two losses. Coach Janine Southby must be tempted to begin with Samantha Sinclair, given the impact she has created when used there in the second half.

With time ticking until April’s Commonweal­th Games on the Gold Coast, New Zealand desperatel­y need to salvage some pride in the remaining two matches for their own self-belief.

Cullen said they trusted their processes and didn’t believe they had suddenly become a horrible side.

‘‘I think the key now is looking forward and pulling all the positives out of those games and nailing those consistent­ly.’’

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