Townsville Bulletin

RAYS THROW MONKEY OFF THEIR BACK

- MATTHEW MCINERNEY

IT has been a long time coming but the Northern Rays have made history with their first win in the Sapphire Series.

The Rays outscored the Wildcats in each of the opening three quarters to hold a handy 10-point lead heading into the final term, then held off the Wildcats’ fightback in the fourth to win 57-55.

For Cairns-based assistant coach Kelly Hynes, victory could not be sweeter.

Hynes has been part of the Rays’ set-up since their establishm­ent for the inaugural Sapphire Series in 2019, and has worked with the North Queensland team’s squad as they endured two winless seasons either side of the Covid-interrupte­d 2020 season when the Rays had to withdraw.

And with the first win on the board, Hynes said it could pave the way to more success for the Townsville team.

“It’s amazing,” Hynes said. “It’s why you put in all of the hard work.

“This will go a long way to getting even more on the board.

“The first one is always hard, but with that won, it makes other wins so much more attainable. It affects the expectatio­ns.

“Now we know that, entering every game, we are a serious chance of winning.”

Hynes, Michaela Kadlecek and training partner Kirsty Sou are waving the flag for Cairns in what is a totally overhauled Rays team.

Coached by Australian netball legend Vicki Wilson, the Rays have welcomed several internatio­nals alongside Ingham product and former Firebirds gun Beryl Friday.

It’s changed the team entirely.

“We’ve got a more experience­d and older squad than we did in the previous seasons,” Hynes said.

“We do have some young training partners, but there’s lots of experience in our squad, some more older heads.

“They’ve got that experience, they know what to expect in different situations and have played in competitio­ns like this before.”

Friday missed the Rays’ historic triumph after suffering an ankle injury in last week’s season-opening 58-47 loss to Sapphire Series newcomers Gold Coast Titans.

There were concerns she would miss an extended period of time, but initial scans have been positive, and the former Firebird is awaiting the results of further scans.

The Rays, who were partly introduced to give junior netballers in Cairns, Townsville and Mackay a clearer pathway to the elite Super Netball, is the only club in the competitio­n to face such a geographic challenge.

The revitalise­d Rays host Cougars at Townsville Stadium this Saturday.

 ?? ?? Kirsty Sou and Michaela Kadlecek. Picture: Brendan Radke
Kirsty Sou and Michaela Kadlecek. Picture: Brendan Radke

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