Taranaki Daily News

Melbourne ominous in victory over Breakers

- MARC HINTON

If this was an Australian NBL semifinal preview, then heaven help the Breakers.

Melbourne United didn’t so much as shrug the monkey off their back, as obliterate the simian courtesy of back-to-back victories over the Breakers in round 18, punctuated by a statement 100-82 win in Auckland yesterday, their first in Auckland since joining the league in 2014-15.

That seals the minor premiershi­p, and top playoff seeding, for Dean Vickerman’s side which is now 19-7 and cannot be headed. At 15-11 the Breakers would need everything to go their way in the final round to clinch second spot, and home advantage for the semifinals.

What looks more likely is they will drop back into the fourth spot, and meet Melbourne in a semifinal series that would have ominous overtones given the events of the weekend. The Breakers had won

10 of their previous 11 over the men from Victoria prior to this weekend, but that hoodoo has now well and truly been buried.

The undermanne­d Breakers had shown plenty in Friday night’s

89-83 defeat in Melbourne, leading by 14 early, and by eight in the final period before hitting the wall over the run home.

But yesterday was a major step backwards. The Breakers, after a bright start, imploded badly in the second and third quarters when they made just 11 of 31 shots. They made a late run in the final quarter, but still ended with their biggest defeat of the season, and a lot to think about.

Edgar Sosa was the lone bright light for the home side, leading all scorers with a game-high 25 points on nine-of-12 shooting, adding nine assists and four boards.

The Breakers had started well enough, leading 30-25 at the end of a crisp opening period, with DJ Newbill’s hot early shooting (he made his first three triples of the spell) spearheadi­ng a solid offensive effort.

Then it all came unstuck rather badly as an horrific display of freethrow shooting marred an ugly second quarter for the Breakers that saw them score just 11 points and allow Melbourne, having their own issues at the offensive end, to edge to a 46-41 halftime lead.

The Breakers’ offence ground to a messy halt – they made just four of 15 shots for the quarter – and their free-throw shooting was even worse as they converted just two of 12 attempts from the charity stripe.

The normally reliable Tom Abercrombi­e, in particular, had a first half to forget, going one of six from the floor and one of eight from the line. Sosa paced the Breakers with 10 first-half points on three-of-six shooting, with Newbill chipping in with nine.

It didn’t get any better in the third either, as the Breakers’ scoring woes continued and Melbourne slipped away to a doublefigu­re lead that extended to 73-48 at the final break. From there it was all about damage limitation for a Breakers side which shot just 43 percent from the floor, 27 from deep and a pitiful 46 from the line.

 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ?? New Zealand Breakers and Melbourne United players engage in a skirmish during the NBL match in Auckland yesterday.
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES New Zealand Breakers and Melbourne United players engage in a skirmish during the NBL match in Auckland yesterday.

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