The Cairns Post

Rising by leaps and rebounds

- JORDAN GERRANS

IF high-flying import Cameron Oliver can rebound the ball at this high a level during the heat of a semi-finals series, it begs the question, why didn’t he do it in the regular season?

NBL coach of the year Mike Kelly was joking when he posed that question after the Taipans’ 85-74 win against Perth on Sunday night, but it does point towards the serious impact Oliver is having.

“If he could have rebounded like this the whole year, I do not know what is going on right now,” Kelly said with his tongue in his cheek about Oliver’s influence on the boards.

IF high-flying import Cameron Oliver can rebound the ball at this high a level during the heat of a semi-finals series, it begs the question, why didn't he do it in the regular season?

NBL coach of the year Mike Kelly was just joking when he posed that question postmatch on Sunday night, but it does point towards the serious impact Oliver is having on the series.

Still just 23 and in his first pro season in Australia, the all NBL second team member has contribute­d 41 points and 36 rebounds in the first two games.

If you compare that to his season average of 17 points and nine boards per game, the numbers tell the tale of how important he has been in the opening two contests.

“If he could have rebounded like this the whole year, I do not know what is going on right now,” Kelly said with his tongue in his cheek about Oliver’s influence on the boards. “But, he has lifted, and a lot of the guys have.

“As a team, guys are trying to do their best and Cam’s best is very good and he has shown that the last couple of games,” Kelly said.

“We talked about hitting bodies and boxing out and we have done a solid job of that and we want to find more ways to team rebound and Cam is a part of that.”

Oliver has been getting it done on both ends of the floor also, keeping Wildcats’ former NBA centre Miles Plumlee’s influence to a minimum so far.

Plumlee landed a few big dunks early in game two but overall he barely impacted the game, despite Perth coach Trevor Gleeson declaring postmatch that he played well, finishing the game with a minus 16 rating in just 18 minutes on the floor.

Oliver has made no secrets of his NBA dreams and looks forward to match-ups against the best big men in the NBL.

“He’s an NBA veteran, he knows how to start his own motor as well,” the 23-year-old said of his game two run-in with Plumlee.

“I’ve got to match his intensity. I’m ready for any matchup.

“Of course, that’s the dream to get to where he was. But I’m just here to do what I can for the team.”

The Taipans depart FNQ headed for Western Australia for game three this morning.

 ??  ?? LIFT: Cameron Oliver goes up.
LIFT: Cameron Oliver goes up.
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