The Press

Centre rises to occasion

- Marc Hinton

The Breakers’ quiet achiever made some serious noise at Auckland’s North Shore Events Centre last night as the Aussie NBL leaders took care of business against the third-placed Townsville Crocodiles.

It was far from a complete performanc­e from the Kiwi title hopefuls but thanks to a strong all-round display from business-like American centre Gary Wilkinson, they were able to scrape out an 81-70 victory that maintains their pursuit of the minor premiershi­p.

The win improves the Breakers to a league-best 17-6 and drops the Crocs to 13-10 as the visitors’ top-two hopes suffered a serious blow. It was also the Kiwi club’s 12th victory from 13 home games this season.

But it was a close-run thing. The Crocs closed to within just two points (68-70) with three minutes remaining, and forced the home team to come up with some big plays in the closing minutes.

Wilkinson produced arguably the biggest of them when his offensive rebound and putback took the Breakers out by 75-70 with 1:12 left – a play that knocked the stuffing out of the Queensland­ers.

In front of their sixth sellout home crowd of the season, the Breakers started and finished well, and played a little too scrappily over the middle stages for anyone’s liking. But crucially, they racked up another win, and put the pressure back on the Perth Wildcats to do likewise over the weekend.

The home team shot a respectabl­e 47 per cent from the floor and won the rebound count (40-27) and points in the paint (44-28) for a solid night’s work. Most crucially, they executed down the stretch when it really counted.

Wilkinson sat for longer than he usually does (playing just 24 minutes), but when he was on court he was mightily effective, finishing with 18 points (7/13 FG, 2/5 3PT) and 10 rebounds.

Fellow import Cedric Jackson was typically industriou­s and even knocked down a NZ Breakers 81 (Gary Wilkinson 18, Cedric Jackson 15, Thomas Abercrombi­e 13, Alex Pledger 11), Townsville Crocodiles 70 ( Eddie Gill 17, Peter Crawford 11, Jacob Holmes 11, Elvin Mims 10). 1Q: 29-15; HT: 46-38; 3Q: 63-56. couple from distance as he finished with 15 points, four rebounds, seven assists and a pair of steals.

Tom Abercrombi­e didn’t quite score at his normal clip (13 points on four-of-eight shooting) but he did everything else beautifull­y, chipping in with seven rebounds and four blocks in a busy display. Alex Pledger added 11 key points (5/7 FG) in relief of Wilkinson, while Dillon Boucher’s relentless hustle was not done justice by a statline of seven points, five points, three assists and a pair of steals.

The Crocs, playing their third game in eight days, stuck at it well and were led by Eddie Gill’s 17 points and four assists, with Peter Crawford, Jacob Holmes and Elvin Mims also playing their part.

The Breakers had produced about as good an opening quarter as they’d managed all season as they ripped out of the blocks to a 29-15 lead. But to the Crocs’ credit, they hung tough and though the Breakers’ lead ballooned to 16 early in the second period, the visitors whittled it down to a manageable eight (46-38) by the major break.

Sure enough, the North Queensland­ers had closed to within four early in the third, and were right in it as the game entered its final minutes.

 ?? Photo: FAIRFAX NZ ?? Doing it tough: Breakers forward Mika Vukona, left, shoots despite the attentions of Townsville Croc Ben Allen at Auckland’s North Shore Events Centre last night.
Photo: FAIRFAX NZ Doing it tough: Breakers forward Mika Vukona, left, shoots despite the attentions of Townsville Croc Ben Allen at Auckland’s North Shore Events Centre last night.

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