The Cairns Post

Moves to help kids

- ANDREAS NICOLA

A ONCE popular initiative to keep kids off the street through sport has resumed after more than a decade and is already proving to be a winner.

Friday kicked off the first session of midnight basketball, a revived version of a program from 2007, but this time Cairns Basketball and the police have joined forces.

It allows kids to come together on the court with renowned players such as Nate Jawai every Friday night from about 7.30pm until midnight.

Cairns Police Detective Senior Sergeant Mick Gooiker said the kids enjoyed the first iteration on Friday.

“The whole idea is giving these kids a healthy safe and active environmen­t to spend their Friday nights so they won’t get in trouble and have positive role models,” he said.

“They get to play with people coming from their own communitie­s, that’s what it’s about. We’ve got to give these kids something to look up to.”

Cairns Marlins coach Kerry Williams is one of those role models who plays with the kids and said it brought him back to his childhood when they did the program in 2007.

“When it was first running, we were the kids on the court running and playing, there were five or six teams on the sidelines waiting to get on the court. There was something to do on the weekend we were able to run around instead of getting into mischief.”

Mr Williams said now that he was able to be a mentor he could get to know the kids a bit more.

Cairns Basketball president Mark Beecroft said it didn’t matter if kids weren’t interested in sport, but it was great for them to build relationsh­ips.

“There will be kids that don’t know each other but they will be engaged and be playing on the team with a total stranger,” he said.

Mulgrave MP Curtis Pitt has been an advocate for this program and said basketball was a great opportunit­y for kids as it’s a simple sport.

“It’s that sense of belonging, people do good things because they want to belong, they also do bad things but we want to give them more good opportunit­ies,” he said.

“I want this to go well for all these kids, I want to see a success of this so we can expand it to the southern corridor of Cairns. I have no doubt we can make a success of it.”

 ?? ?? Memphis Walker and Pranton Mabo go for the jump ball with Cairns Taipans player Nate Jawai at the first midnight basketball night at Early Settler Stadium at Manunda. Picture: Jasmine Amis
Memphis Walker and Pranton Mabo go for the jump ball with Cairns Taipans player Nate Jawai at the first midnight basketball night at Early Settler Stadium at Manunda. Picture: Jasmine Amis

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