One night in the middle of my basketball writing life, I was in the Townsville Suns team bus hurtling along the A49 for Newcastle after a lightning tournament in the coastal town of Terrigal. First stop was a bottle shop. While I tried to type a story in the back of the bus, the other occupants hoed into the cartons of beer. After about half an hour, the club’s CEO, Dennis O’Keeffe, looked out a window and said, “Shouldn’t the ocean be on our right side?”
We were usually a little smarter than that. Though the Suns
were still new to the National Basketball League back then, from an early point the
club had realised the league was heading in entirely the wrong direction. Not
that it did them much good.
American basketball fans would be forgiven for thinking that,
with at least seven Australians playing in the NBA, the men's game in this
country is in a healthy state. They'd be wrong. Women's basketball and male
basketball at the development levels might be in robust good shape, but the men’s
elite competition, the NBL, is struggling for exposure and relevance. That wasn’t
always so. The NBL was the “boom” professional sports competition in Australia
in the 1980s and 1990s. Then just about everything went bust.
I was reminded of the glory days when on Australia Day this
week Cal Bruton was honoured with a Medal of the Order of Australia for service
to basketball. The glory days are a distant memory. The ongoing problems faced
by the NBL are entirely of its own making, and have little to do with the
finest young Australian players heading overseas to hone their skills in the US
college system and the NBA. Indeed, by far the greatest amount of publicity now
afforded basketball in Australia concerns the game-to-game performances of our
NBA players. Australian basketball followers have at least something to be
thankful about. For professional sports in this country, plentiful exposure on
free-to-air TV is the be-all and end-all of their existence; Australians have
been spoilt for so long with free access to televised sport that they remain
loath to fork out to watch those sports which, because of our anti-siphoning
regulations, are mainly confined to pay TV. The NBL is buried away on SBS On
Demand and SBS Viceland (which has a viewing share of 1 per cent!).
In 1979 Australia was ripe for a professional basketball
league. Its national team, the Boomers, had advanced in Olympic Games and World
Cup events and in high scorer Eddie Palubinskas, Australia had produced a
player worthy of NBA consideration (he was a 1974 NBA draftee but didn't play
in the NBA). State leagues flourished and had started to make the game
attractive, even to the uninitiated. It wasn't until 1988 that the NBA was
televised free-to-air on the national broadcast network, the ABC, and
Australian basketball fans loved this more exciting, entertaining spectacle. But
the NBL wasn't the NBA, not least because zone defences were allowed here, and
that made our basketball a subtly if significantly different game.
In 1991 Luc Longley became the first Aussie to play in the
NBA. That so many other young Australian basketballers have since made it to
the highest level in the game is in large part a lasting legacy of the work
done by those evangelist (purely in the basketball sense) Americans who came to
Australia for the start of the original NBL. Most were players
(NBL clubs were allowed two "imports" each) but many were coaches.
One thing they had in common was their "missionary zeal" - they had an
inexhaustible capacity to promote and publicise basketball, and to capitalise
on the Australian public's appetite for knowledge about what was a very new and
different professional sporting competition in this country. Until 1979, the
only team sport competitions approaching full professionalism were cricket and
two of the football codes. A five-a-side game played indoors with a large round
ball and an enormous amount of specifically - some might say artificially -
generated hoopla took some getting used to.
An excellent summary of the “American conversion” is contained
in a paper published by former Australian National University historian Scott
Bennett in the Australian Society for Sports Historians’ Sporting Traditions
in November 1986. Called “The Cannons and Canberra”, it is available online in
the LA84 Foundation’s digital library.
One of the first imported "stars" mentioned by
Bennett is Bruton, from Jamaica, Queen's, New York City. During the 20 years I
covered the NBL (for spurious reasons, my accreditation was cancelled in 1999),
and occasionally since that time, Cal and I have had many conversations about
"what went wrong" for the Australian men's “elite” competition. The
NBL reached the point in 2008 when its own chief executive, Chuck Harmison,
described it as a "train wreck". It was in a “semi-induced coma” and
on life support, he said. "While it’s not dead," added Harmison,
"it’s the victim of a pretty horrendous train crash." Harmison, who
came here from Ohio State University, said he felt the sport wasn’t ready for
the explosion in popularity it experienced in the 80s and 90s and "took
its eye off the ball".
A telling reason it wasn't ready (and distracted by
non-consequentials) was a failure reflected both on-court and in the NBL's head
office. In hindsight, perhaps the NBL should have considered importing referees
as well as US players and coaches when it started out. Australian referees were
not equal to the challenge which emerged with an NBL involving 18 savvy,
fast-moving, fast-talking Americans. But NBL officials stamped on any criticism
of the refereeing standards, courtside or in the Press. They used a fine system
to prevent coaches from making adverse remarks about referees - always a major
mistake, in that it denies the paying public their right to know what coaches are
thinking. Australian fans, passionate but often bemused and sometimes angry
about on-court decisions, were thirsty for the knowledge that coaches with
American experience could impart, but for fear of being fined could not.
Spectators
were entitled to the benefit of their wisdom. When Chris Anstey returned from
playing in the NBA and said referees were ruining the game in Australia, he was
heavily fined. Rather than stifle comment, the NBL needed to face the facts
that people with expertise were pointing out. Failure to do so lowered the boom on the NBL.
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