Waikato Times

Breakers backed to go long way

- Marc Hinton

Former Boomers and NBL great Sam McKinnon has dished out a withering assessment of the New Zealand Breakers’ championsh­ip credential­s.

‘‘They’ve favourites,’’ he declared after his Brisbane Bullets had just been put to the sword by Mody Maor’s soaring side in Auckland on Sunday.

McKinnon was serving as interim head coach for an undermanne­d Bullets side that had no answer to the all-round game of the Breakers as they surged to a 116-79 Australian NBL victory that improved them to 10-3 for the season, was their fourth on the bounce and seventh in the last eight.

The Breakers are not required to cross the Tasman this week, hosting the dangerous South East Melbourne Phoenix in Christchur­ch on Thursday night, before following up back at Auckland’s Spark Arena on Saturday against heated rivals the Perth Wildcats. It’s a nice little measuring stick for a side that has become the talk of this competitio­n.

And McKinnon, who stepped into the breach at the Bullets after head coach James Duncan was fired on Friday, made it clear that right now everybody in the league, including the 8-2 defending champion Sydney Kings, are chasing the standard being set by Maor’s men.

‘‘They just have everything,’’ McKinnon told Stuff after the game. ‘‘They’re big and strong, and the stress and anxiety comes in when [Jarrell] Brantley is going to work in the post or [Dererk] Pardon – and they shot the lights out of it. They’ve got weapons everywhere . . . perimeter threats, post threats. They’ve got the makings of a really good team.’’

And McKinnon, a triple Olympian with the Boomers, was not buying a theory that Maor’s men had flown under the radar through the first half of this season on the back of two brutal campaigns over the Covid peak played out almost entirely on the road.

‘‘Not for me, they weren’t,’’ he said. ‘‘I do the recruiting and I know what they got. I was feeling sorry for them last year, but I’m not feeling sorry for them now. They recruited really well . . . those imports, Will McDowell-White and [Izaya] Le’afa, I may have tried to see what they were doing in the offseason.

‘‘I haven’t doubted them. I heard them say they’re the underdogs. They’re the favourites, in my opinion.’’

The Kings, and their proven offence-minded lineup, might beg to differ, but the Breakers appear to have found a nice rhythm, based on their league-best defence and a balanced rotation with firepower throughout. Against the Bullets on Sunday they shot a sizzling 60% from the floor and 52% from beyond the arc as they rode home on Brantley’s 29 points, 21 (all in the first half) from Izayah Le’afa, 17 from Barry Brown Jr and 16 from Dererk Pardon.

There were good signs, too, that Tom Abercrombi­e and Cam Gliddon – important pieces as this thing plays out – were catching some form as they knocked down a combined five triples. They are also playing without two key pieces in French Next Star Rayan Rupert and backup big Rob Loe.

But Maor has set the bar high for this group, and managed to find something to be critical of in the wake of a comprehens­ive victory over a Bullets side down its two best big men and an import.

‘‘We need to learn how to be great when we win,’’ he said. ‘‘I did not like that second quarter [won 35-26]. We gave up 47 points in the first half – that is not our team, this is not how we play, and I don’t care what the score is.’’

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