Marlborough Express - Weekend Express

Basketball numbers boom

- MATT HAMPSON

A sport in Marlboroug­h is suddenly booming, and it’s not played on grass.

Nearly 100 primary and intermedia­te grade teams are playing basketball in Marlboroug­h this season, which Marlboroug­h Basketball developmen­t officer Farishta Peterson-Ihaka said was probably the most ever.

“Yeah, it's pretty big,” Peterson-Ihaka said. And the region’s young ballers just can’t get enough, she said, recalling one young player who was reportedly devastated when last year’s season ended.

“His mother let us know — he had his last game, he went home, didn't talk to anyone, went to his room, put his headphones on and lay on his bed, like ‘What now? What about my basketball?’ They just love it.

“People ring us up and say, ‘Is there a court? Can I just come down and shoot hoops?’”

The number of girls playing in junior grades had “doubled” during the past couple of years. Peterson-Ihaka said the growth was being driven by Girls Got Game — a national programme aimed at introducin­g girls to basketball, which had been rolled out in Marlboroug­h last season.

“So there’s a lot of focus going into getting girls into the game, and we’ve certainly doubled our numbers in the girls' competitio­n, there’s much more interest

coming from girls,” she said. “And I have to say, it has totally upped the girls' participat­ion, and hence, we got a really good showing for our under-13 trials.”

She thought the creation of a women’s national basketball league last year, Tauihi Basketball Aotearoa, likely helped the boost in girls’ participat­ion.

And inspiring the boys, no doubt, were the Tall Blacks playing the 2023 FIBA World Cup, Steven Adams’ NBA success, and the creation of 3x3 “street ball” competitio­ns in Marlboroug­h, she said.

Marlboroug­h's winter basketball leagues boomed this year, with 96 teams entering into primary and intermedia­te school grades, and 39 high school teams. Peterson-Ihaka

said the league was lucky to have accommodat­ed them all.

“The primary league starts at 3.45pm and goes till 8.30pm, just to fit all the games through,” Peterson-Ihaka said.

“It’s well-supported by schools and by parents, because obviously everyone has to have a coach and a manager, so it’s quite a big ask of everyone, but they seem to be getting on board and doing it.”

She said her role as developmen­t officer was only created by Marlboroug­h Basketball in 2022, “purely because there is a lot to do … in terms of all the competitio­ns we run and all the teams that we send to tournament­s and things like that, on top of everything else that’s needed”.

 ?? ?? Basketball is big in Marlboroug­h and growing, says Marlboroug­h Basketball developmen­t officer Farishta Peterson-Ihaka, left, with manager Jacinda Thompson, at Marlboroug­h Lines Stadium 2000.
Basketball is big in Marlboroug­h and growing, says Marlboroug­h Basketball developmen­t officer Farishta Peterson-Ihaka, left, with manager Jacinda Thompson, at Marlboroug­h Lines Stadium 2000.

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