Stratford Press

New coach for Taranaki men’s basketball team

- Will Johnston Sport News Taranaki

Former player and current South East Melbourne Phoenix assistant coach Sam Mackinnon will take charge of the Taranaki Airs next season.

Mackinnon has accepted a twoyear head coaching deal after longtime coach Trent Adam moved to take up a role in the Japanese league after this season.

Mackinnon, of Victoria, Australia, started playing representa­tive basketball in 1994 for South East Melbourne before playing for five other teams until his retirement in 2010.

Mackinnon won two championsh­ips, one with the Melbourne Magic in 1996 and one with the Brisbane Bullets in the 2006/07 season, in which he was the competitio­n’s MVP. He’s spent the last five years at the Bullets in a variety of roles, including assistant coach, general manager of basketball and interim head coach.

It will be the 47-year-old’s maiden fulltime head coaching role. He said he’s excited to lead the Airs after the team were bought by Australian company Media8 and narrowly missed out on the playoffs this year.

“I see this as a great opportunit­y to work with new ownership while respecting the club’s history, working with local players, coaches and partners, and building the Airs into a destinatio­n club. Personally, I had so many fantastic experience­s with New Zealand basketball, and can’t wait to get to work with recruiting and preparing for the upcoming season.”

Taranaki Airs general manager Cole Brown said Adam’s departure was a promotion into a better league after the hard work over the years.

He said Mackinnon will be focused on the recruitmen­t of local players and will use his Australian networks.

“It was key for us to get our head coach locked in,” Brown said. “We will look to utilise our local players more. It’s going to be a change of mindset for us.”

While there will still be the odd import, Brown said he will use them to support local players around the skillsets the side are missing.

“The model has been three American imports in the past. But we think we can get better outcomes with two Australia imports and some high-end Kiwis and one American.”

Brown said “exciting conversati­ons” were ongoing with players to maintain the core squad.

“We’re pretty confident we will have a pretty awesome roster,” he said.

Next season will stick to the same timeframe, with a late March or early April start and a July finish.

Brown was pleased Basketball New Zealand had re-introduced home playoffs after they were played in Auckland over the last few years amid cost pressures from Covid.

“The league has grown so fast and it’s sustainabl­e, so the opportunit­y for teams to host is really exciting. If we manage to get there, we will get some real hype around it, which is exciting for our population.”

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