Netball Update
The Central Pulse held its nerve to narrowly beat the Ascot Park Hotel Southern Steel 57-54 tonight and book a spot in tomorrow’s final at a preseason tournament in Queenstown.
The unbeaten Pulse will take on the Queensland
Firebirds for tournament bragging rights, while the Steel
face a rematch with the Tactix for third place. The visiting
Australian outclassed the Tactix 60-44 in their semi-final.
Toppled 43-59 by their South Island neighbours
earlier in the day, the Southern hosts were forced into the
undesirable position of fourth qualifier to meet the Pulse
tonight, courtesy of the Wellington team’s surprising
59-54 victory over the highly-fancied Firebirds.
Depleted by injuries to key players, including Silver
Ferns Liana Leota, Leana de Bruin and midcourter Natasha
Chokljat and defender Sheryl Scanlan, the Steel have been
forced to rely on a makeshift squad which includes several
ring ins.
On a positive note, Steel co-captain Wendy
Frew staged her return to the court following shoulder
surgery and added valuable leadership to a fledgling
midcourt.
“It’s a great feeling to be back out
there on court, although I felt a bit rusty since I
haven’t played a game in six months,” Frew said.
The Steel remained competitive throughout tonight’s
clash against the Pulse.
“We just need to ensure we
keep raising the bar … it’s preseason but we still do
want to perform well and it’s disappointing to suffer four
losses on the trot,” Frew said.
Locked 16-16 after
the first quarter, both teams traded goals for the majority
of the second before some deft touches from goal defence Te
Huinga Reo Selby-Rickit assisted the Steel to snatch a
slight buffer.
Faced with a 29-31 deficit at haltime,
Pulse coach Yvette McCausland-Durie opted to mix things up
with a host of changes – and it immediately had an impact
with the Pulse taking the lead just three minutes in the
third spell.
While hesitation crept into the
Steel’s game and flow through the court suffered, the
Pulse grew in confidence and fired off some torpedo passes
from long range to hit the 1.88m target of goal shoot
Caitlin Thwaites.
Down 40-45 heading into the final
15 minutes, the Steel battled its way back into contention
to trail by just one goal with three minutes remaining but
didn’t quite manage to punch it home.
The Steel’s
earlier game against the Tactix was a more one-sided affair.
With the score tied 9-9 halfway through the opening
spell, a late charge earned the Tactix a healthy 18-12
buffer at the break.
Five in a row saw the Steel back
within striking distance but it failed to capitalise and the
Tactix – propelled by formidable shooter Donna Wilkins –
embarked on a 11-4 scoring rampage.
Down 23-35 at
halftime, the Steel won the third spell by two but were
unable to continue the momentum.
Jamaican import
Kasey Evering was particularly menacing at goal keep for the
Tactix, while her Steel counterpart Louise Thayer – a last
minute inclusion – produced another solid display.
With just a couple of wins in three years of the ANZ
Championship to its credit, the Pulse’s win over the
Firebirds would have been hailed as `giant-killing’ if not
for the informal status of a preseason hit-out.
Regardless, it was a victory to be proud of with the
Pulse surmounting a seven-goal deficit to win the final
quarter 20-12 and claim the four-goal win.
“I think we might have a smile about that one,” coach Yvette McCausland-Durie said. “We need to experience the feel of the win … everyone expects us to lose but maybe now that scene will change.
Thwaites spearheaded the attack,
slotting 39 of her 41 attempts.
“Our shooters are
going from range and that’s making a massive difference.
The players are really starting to back each other and trust
themselves.”
Results: Tactix beat Steel 59-43,
Pulse beat Firebirds 59-54, Firebirds beat Tactix 60-44,
Pulse beat Steel 57-54.
Ends