The Forgotten Sport

There is a league in Australia that is elite in every sense of the word.

Our Women’s National Basketball League or the WNBL, has been at the top of its game for a decade but you would never know.

Make no mistake, our female basketballers are world class performers in what is a world class league but unless you go to a game you don’t get to see it.

Surprisingly there is no free to air coverage on television, in addition to a distinct lack of promotion by the WNBL themselves.

With team’s starting taking action and live streaming games, it has certainly taken a step forward in the publicity stakes but fundamentally it’s the forgotten women’s game.

Led by the Women’s Big Bash League and the gamble taken by channel 10 in televising women’s cricket, women’s sport is a hot commodity.

With extraordinary TV ratings and games attracting over 400,000 viewers, the newly minted queen of women’s sport, outperformed A-League soccer and the state based Men’s cricket Cup last year.

In what must be a bitter pill for the WNBL, Women’s cricket or least the twenty- twenty version, leads the way for female sport in Australia.

Add into the mix the emerging AFL women’s league which kicks off in 2017 and further pressure is applied to women’s basketball in Australia.

The new AFLW will surely attract attention and carve up an already shrinking television pie.

Following the ABC’s axing of its WNBL coverage two years ago and with television channels multiplying like rabbits, it’s astonishing that the second best women’s basketball league in the world doesn’t have a broadcast partner.

With the Men’s national competition, the NBL, being run privately and not part of the Basketball Australia equation, the WNBL is Basketball Australia’s premier national competition.

With basketball in the top bracket of participation sports in Australian and just under half of those participants being female, it begs the question, what are the WNBL or more particular, Basketball Australia doing?

For Justin Nelson, General Manager of WNBL club The Melbourne Boomers, it’s a sense of frustration and a growing concern.

“Basketball Australia manages the WNBL and some dedicated focus on promotion wouldn’t go astray. The league needs to better promote itself. For example, I’ve spent time with V8 Supercars and everything is flat out promotion, you can’t just expect people to turn up. You have to work hard for your audience and then even harder to keep them. That’s what competition is about right now in the sporting world.”

Nelson believes that more work needs to be done at the top level to help not only the WNBL clubs but the game itself.

“I want basketball to fully realise its demographic and successfully gain a piece of the sponsorship pie, because if we don’t drive this game commercially it will fall further behind the football codes, and the likes of netball and cricket”.

With the Australian women’s basketball team, the Opals, in the top bracket of teams across the globe coupled with the success of the WBBL and the fact we have arguably to second best female basketball league in the world, surely the time is right for the WNBL or basketball Australia to pounce……or not as seems to be the case.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Exum you may not have heard about…..

tierra-exum

After playing a full season in his rookie NBA year, Aussie basketball star Dante Exum, spent the entire 2015\16 season watching from the stands with a knee injury.

At the same time as he was sitting on the sidelines reading the game day program, another Exum family member took the spotlight.

Tierra Exum, took centre stage and exploded onto the sporting scene in 2016.

The 21 year old twin sister of the Utah Jazz star, burst onto the professional athletics scene on New Year’s Day, by winning the Open 70 metre sprint at the Maryborough Gift meeting.

She finished the season in spectacular fashion when flashing home to get second in the rich Stawell Women’s Gift last April, missing the winners cheque by a mere 0.02 seconds.

Tierra is easy to like. She laughs a lot and has an open demeanour.

Strong, athletic and determined, the daughter of former National Basketball League Star Cecil Exum, is forging a name for herself away from basketball, in one of Australia’s oldest sports.

With personal goals that involve more field than track, Tierra sees triple jump as her preferred option but admits to loving running as a ‘pro’.

The former gymnast, turned triple jumper\sprinter, has set her sights high, and is using professional athletics as a springboard to further her  triple jump career.

“My goal is to one day make an Australian Commonwealth Games team and represent Australia in the triple jump”, she said.

Introduced to professional sprinting by her coach, she sees ‘pro racing’ as an important step in her development as a triple jumper.

“Pro running is great for my speed, it’s helping me with my triple jump and I really enjoy the racing”, she said.

With a history borne from the goldfields of Victoria in the 1800s and raced mostly on grass, under handicap conditions, ‘pro’ sprinting is unique to Australia and Scotland.

As is the case for successful professional athletes, winning in the Victorian Athletic League has its benefits.

Opposed to amateur athletics, where winners are awarded medals, professional athlete’s race for prize money.

“The money is great and it not only helps me with all the expenses associated with being an athlete but it helps pay for my mobile phone bill”, she laughed.

Like most ‘pro athletes’, early in the season she took aim at the worlds richest professional sprint race, the Stawell Women’s Gift. Unlike most pro athletes though, she almost took home the win.

History says she came a close second in the event to 15 year old Talia Martin.

In one of professional athletics most controversial victories, Martin from Ballarat, had to face the stewards after her rapid improvement.

Said to have improved more in two weeks, than most athletes improve in a lifetime, Talia was given a $2000 fine.

Racing under handicap conditions, it’s a requirement that all athletes run to their full potential in every race. With starting handicaps based on race performances, handicappers judge an athlete based on times and results.

Like the Melbourne Cup in horse racing, poorer performers are given improved handicaps, or better chances to win.

For Tierra it was exciting to be placed in the biggest female race of the year but admitted that the eventual winner was somewhat unexpected.

“It was a great race and I almost got there. Talia had a great race but usually you know who will be your main competition and she was a surprise for sure”.

With money being wagered in the bookies ring, the Stawell Gift has thrown up many ‘smokies’ and surprises over the years.

Offering equal prize money of $60,000 for both the men’s and women’s Gift, Stawell remains a much sought after ‘jewel’ in the professional athletics crown.

For Tierra Exum, the Stawell Gift will continue to be a goal, and at only 21 years of age, she has time on her side.