Bristol Post

Basketball Agony for the Flyers as they fall just short of play-off final

- Andrew ARTHUR postsport@b-nm.co.uk

BRISTOL Flyers narrowly missed out on their first British Basketball League (BBL) play-off final after almost completing an extraordin­ary comeback over defending champions Leicester Riders.

In a thrilling two-legged semifinal, which was decided on aggregate points scored over both games, the Flyers found themselves down by as many as 26 points early in the first game at home on Friday night.

Amid an electric atmosphere at SGS College Arena, generated by a ‘pink wall’ of fervent Flyers fans decked out in complement­ary play-off t-shirts - the team produced a display of grit and determinat­ion typifying their record-breaking season, to reduce the deficit to just seven with the Riders ahead by a nose, 77-84, heading into game two on Sunday.

Despite having previously only won twice at Leicester’s Morningsid­e Arena in seven years, the Flyers rose to the challenge. They battled back to lead the tie by as many as five points on aggregate early in the final quarter, and were up four with less than five minutes to play.

However, it was the Riders - led by Rob Paternostr­o, one of the most decorated coaches in BBL history who ultimately cleared the final fence to book their place at the showpiece play-off final at the O2 Arena in London.

Despite winning the second leg 75-79, former NBA G-league player Marc Loving iced two clutch free throws late on for Leicester to put overall victory just beyond Bristol’s reach, as it finished 159-156 on aggregate.

The two sides, who had battled for second and third spots in the league table during the regular season, produced an enthrallin­g contest that served as an incredible advert for British basketball.

In the early goings of the return leg in Leicester, both sides went blow for blow. The Flyers captain Mike Miller grabbing six early points after finding his stroke from mid range with a trio of mid range jump shots.

Leicester’s 7 ft 3 centre Aaron Menzies caused problems for Bristol early, grabbing offensive rebounds to create scoring opportunit­ies for sharp-shooter Loving, who finished with 18 points.

The Flyers’ leading scorer this season VJ King, who returned to the starting line-up after contributi­ng 23 points off the bench in the first leg, hit his team’s first threepoint­er with a shot that bounced off the top of the backboard, in what proved to be his only made shot in game two.

After being stuck three in the game and down 10 on aggregate after the opening quarter, the Flyers continued to grow into the game. Head coach Andreas Kapoulas ran some rotations, featuring centre Malcolm Delpeche and brilliant back-up big Leslee Smith, as his team got into early foul trouble.

Guard Tevin Olison got hot in the second frame, draining three shots from downtown, the last of which a deep buzzer beater on the wing, which sent the teams to the locker rooms with Bristol leading the game 40-42, but still five points adrift on aggregate.

The Flyers picked up where they left off in the second half, opening with a five-point run to tie the contest on aggregate. First hot hand Olison, who finished with 19, found the bottom of net with another three-ball.

On the next play, game MVP Delpeche produced a blockbuste­r denial on the defensive end, before floating the ball into the net when found open by Thomas Bell III, after the forward had scrambled for an offensive board on the floor.

Bristol later regained the overall lead of the tie for the first time since the opening two minutes of game one, when Bell III made two freethrows after Zach Jackson was called for a foul. Smith extended Bristol’s aggregate lead to three with a hook shot over the towering Menzies, before Riders guard Kimbal Mackenzie levelled it up with a big time three.

Miller reinstated Bristol’s lead, before a frenetic passage of play ensued. Over one minute and 40 seconds, three back-to-back travel offences were called, with not a single point scored, as the pressure mounted on both sides.

After Great Britain internatio­nal Patrick Whelan was faultless from the free-throw line to give Leicester a three-point aggregate lead, Olison pump faked and finger rolled the ball in to cut the overall deficit to one.

An explosive end to the third quarter saw Delpeche, who had edged the Flyers back in front, intercepte­d a pass from Mackenzie, dished the ball to Miller who dribbled up the court, before lobbing the ball back for Delpeche to stuff the ball home with a two-handed slam for the ‘alley-oop’ play.

The Flyers were up five - their biggest aggregate lead of the whole tie - at the start of the final quarter, when Bell III followed up with a huge put-back dunk off a missed three.

But the Riders hit back with a huge corner three from Mackenzie, before back-to-back buckets from captain Darien Nelson-Henry reinstated their advantage.

With less than five minutes to go in the contest, Bell III had the Flyers back up by four on aggregate to give the travelling Bristol fans hopes of a famous victory.

However, Leicester demonstrat­ed their championsh­ip credential­s to once more wrestle back the lead, thanks to a huge three from Loving and an ‘and one’ play from Whelan. Delpeche was clobbered as he almost made what would have been a huge onehanded jam, but he missed both from the line, and Jackson subsequent­ly drained a massive three to put the Riders up by five on aggregate with three minutes to go.

With just over a minute left, Delpeche cut Leicester’s lead to three with a hook shot after grabbing a great board.

Miller missed after driving to the bucket. Mackenze clunked a three attempt for the Riders, with Bell III securing possession with 18 seconds to go after diving bravely for the loose ball.

Miller then found the cutting Delpeche, who threw down the hammer with another slam, to make it a one-point game on aggregate with nine seconds left, prompting a timeout from Leicester.

After Bristol were unable to intercept the rebound pass, Bell III provided the foul to give the Flyers a chance of another possession, but at the cost of sending Loving to the line, who with ice in his veins knocked down both free throws.

With no timeouts remaining, Flyers guard Jelani Watson-Gayle had a tough look at a last ditch, contested three-pointer from the wing to send the game to overtime. But the recent Team GB call-up wasn’t able to connect, meaning Leicester progressed to the final by a slim three-point margin.

At the buzzer, the Flyers players took to the stands to greet their travelling fans after a historic campaign. The team secured their highest ever regular season finish of third place in the BBL league, with 25 wins - the most ever in a season - while they also went on a record seven-game winning streak.

 ?? Pictures: Ryan Crockett/JMP ?? Tevin Olison of Bristol Flyers in action during the BBL Championsh­ip semi-final second leg against Leicester Riders at the Morningsid­e Arena
Pictures: Ryan Crockett/JMP Tevin Olison of Bristol Flyers in action during the BBL Championsh­ip semi-final second leg against Leicester Riders at the Morningsid­e Arena
 ?? ?? Mike Miller in action for the Bristol Flyers against Leicester Riders
Mike Miller in action for the Bristol Flyers against Leicester Riders

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