2024 Halls Medal Preview

For the first time since 2021 we won’t have a repeat winner of the Halls Medal. Three players from the top five lead the way with a spirited Lion looking to secure the club’s second Womens win since 2012, another a 30 year drought for their club and another looking to make it five years in a row for the league’s imports…

Photo Credit – As Supplied

3-Minute Read

A huge thankyou to our experts, the commentators of the NBL1 Central that cast their own 3-2-1 each match of the season to help with the predictions below for the award…

Previous Decade Winners

2013       Jess Foley (Norwood Flames)

2014       Amy Lewis (Norwood Flames)

2015       Callan Taylor (Woodville Warriors)

2016       Olivia “Levicki” Thompson (Forestville)

2017       Alex Wilson (Eastern Mavericks)

2018       Chelsea Brook (Sturt Sabres)

2019      Carmen Tyson-Thomas (Eastern Mavericks)        

2021      Teige Morrell (Southern Tigers)

2022     Mikayla Williams (Sturt Sabres)

2023     Mikayla Williams (Sturt Sabres)

Did you know???

In the Womens the club who has won the most Halls medals is North Adelaide with 10 followed by South Adelaide with nine and West Adelaide with eight. Out of the 10 current clubs, everyone has posted a winner with Sam Woosnam the least recent club player to win it for West Adelaide way back in 2006. The biggest multiple winner of the Halls is Vikki Kelson who has won it four times in 2000, 2001 and 2005 including a three-way tie in 1999 with Narelle Lindsay and Kristen Veal. Last year we had our first back-to-back Halls medallist in Mikayla Williams since Deanna Smith for the South Adelaide Panthers in 2003 and 2004.      

The Favourites

Brooke Basham

It seems we have returned to this time last year where it’s now been 30 years since North Adelaide Women’s last Halls Medallist in Jo Hill (1994) – but Adelaide Lightning shooting guard Brooke Basham is right up there once again this year. With more of a prominent role at the Rockets minus a majority of the season Mansfield and Batish – Brooke has polled close to we think nine times with possibly some extra votes in other games in all-round performances for the Rockets. It’s going to have her somewhere between 20-30 votes for the season and right up there for the medal.

Casey Samuels

The Bendigo Spirit WNBL star has led the Lions pack up north all season and featured statistically right at the front of the queue. She has the greatest opportunity to be the club’s second ever Halls medallist behind Jess Mahony – the last time the Women’s made the finals in the league’s history. We think she’s polled nearly 15 of the 18 games but the big question will be whether these will be threes and twos in the count with teammates Tayla Levy, Lily Ritz and Jasmin Fejo possibly taking votes off her. I think she’ll be top three with this crop but the difference between winning the award and finishing just short may rely on how much impact her other team-mates were viewed to have.   

Brittany Hodges

Became the focal point of the Panthers offence and consistently performed averaging a double double across the season. The key here for Hodges is games where she may have snuck a vote or two in losses the Panthers had where clearly she was one of the best still on the court. Overall we think she’s polled over ten times in games plus picked up some one voters along the way. That leaves her without too many apart from Ash Spencer to take consistent votes off her one of the very warm favourites. If she wins she’ll be the fifth winner of the award from the import class with Carmen Tyson-Thomas, Teige Morrell and Mikayla Williams – the last local was Chelsea Brook in 2018.   

The Smokeys

Tayla Levy

Had an exceptional year where her value was felt most by the Lions when she wasn’t suited up. The dynamic point guard has taken a huge step forward in development and is one of the most exciting players to watch in her position in the competition. Likely to be the one to take some votes off her teammates at least eight to ten times – I don’t think you can rule her out capping a breakout year with the Halls medal around her neck by the end of the night.

Emily Saunders

There is always one player that will go largely uncontested for major votes throughout the season and this year’s version is Saunders from the Norwood Flames. Has also finished the season in a fiery fury at least polling a vote in the last five matches of the season for a total of possible nine appearances on the cards. What will hurt is the late start and that might leave her just short.

Maddy Freer

Another outstanding year for the Forestville Eagle stepping into star quality territory in 2024. Freer has been a huge part of the Eagles being a dark horse this season and is a known consistent vote getter. It looks like at least seven times she’ll poll close to three votes but there is a patch in the season where the performances of others overshadowed their contribution and might just leave them a bit short of the real contenders for 2024.

Keep An Eye on

Zoe Walker-Roberts

This is a huge compliment to a player that has been clearly the Sabres most consistent contributor in 2024. In a season where the Sabres have finished top she’s the most likely to poll consistently despite being a part of a team which from the optics looked like an even unit. ZWR has polled at least seven times but it could be more if she’s viewed with her overall contributions of receiving more votes on a regular basis.

Jordyn Freer

When the Rockets get votes if it’s not Basham then Freer won’t be to far behind. Freer out of the big name Rockets has been on court the most throughout the season and will definitely be amongst the votes. We think she’ll grab votes at least eight matches in the season but what number will be the question.

Lily Ritz

An excellent debut year for the Lions import in our league, ultra consistent and always performed her role week-in-week out. The knock for Ritz will be the two others grabbing votes off her plus Jasmin Fejo but you never know – she may have polled more three votes then we can anticipate.

The Winner is… Casey Samuels

I’m thinking given she’ll poll in 15 games – the higher chance she has more threes than we think is good numbers and that for me edges her just ahead of Basham and Hodges in a much tighter count than we’ve seen in previous seasons.

We want to continue our work telling the stories of SA Basketball this winter and beyond with world championships, local legends, NBL and WNBL previews, reviews and NBL1 off season news and predictions – Can you PLEASE HELP US with a shotclock sub of $14 or $24 a year to help us do this?

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“All about Ability – the last five year’s of the Men’s Ivor Burge Program”

“The all-time Adelaide Lightning All-Stars Team – Naming the team of the past 30 years of Adelaide Lightning players”

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2024 Woollacott Medal Preview

Familiar names but new history potentially awaits the winner of the 2024 Woollacott Medal. One looking to win their second after winning it eleven years ago, another the early pick and covers all numbers across the floor with another looking for their elusive third but also will create league history at the same time…

Photo Credit – As Supplied

3-Minute Read

A huge thankyou to our experts, the commentators of the NBL1 Central that cast their own 3-2-1 each match of the season to help with the predictions below for the award…

Previous Decade Winners

2013       Daniel Johnson (West Adelaide)

2014       Alex Starling (Woodville)

2015       Matthew Lycett (Norwood)

2016      Nelson Kirksey  (Woodville)

2017       Eian Davis (South Adelaide)

2018       Alex Starling (North Adelaide)

2019       CJ Turnage (Southern)

2021       CJ Turnage (Norwood)

2022       Jeremy Smith (South Adelaide)

2022       Jawan Stepney (Woodville)

Did you know???

In the Mens the club with the most Woollacott medals won is Sturt who were also United Church prior to 1972 with 12, West Adelaide and Norwood each have 11. Out of the 10 current clubs, everyone has posted a winner with Steve Brekke the least recent club player to win it for Central District Lions way back in 1984. The biggest multiple winner of the Woollacott is “Chairman of the Boards” himself Mark Davis who has won it five times between 1986 and 1992 including a tie with former 36ers teammate Mike McKay in 1987. There have also been 14 back-to-back winners of the award with the most recent CJ Turnage in 2019 and 2021 and the first Don Collins for West Torrens in 1951.

The Favourites

Daniel Johnson (Forestville Eagles)

The 2013 winner of the award seems to get better with age and has been even more prominent this season. With the league on a bigger stage they don’t come much bigger than the NBL legendary local big man. His team have been consistently top five all season with we think DJ polling in 14 matches giving him a significant advantage over others teams. The battle is within as votes are split between five starters capable of being awarded the votes instead but it’s hard to ignore the averages of 20.8 points including scoring eleven times 20 or more this season.   

Jordan Forbes (Sturt Sabres)

My pick for the medal at the start of the season got the head start on many competitors that were going to challenge this season. One of the few players that has most likely grabbed some early votes in the season but how many again is the question. Jacob Rigoni’s red hot start to the season has a lot to do with that but for Sturt to be right up the top – Forbes is a big reason why. We think he’s polled double figures for the season and not only that – perhaps those close triple doubles may earn him even more. Like DJ he has teammates that may steal votes but he’ll also be right there in the race at the very end of the count.

Alex Starling (South Adelaide Panthers)

It’s hard to believe but like DJ – Starling has just gotten even better this season. In a team that didn’t have last year’s medallist Jeremy Smith till halfway through the season – Starling going for his third accolade (2014 and 2018) will be dominating those votes all the way up till his inclusion. Even then we count 14 or 18 opportunities he’ll score votes – you just know he’ll sneak a few more in there as well and at both ends of the floor is where he’ll once again catch the eye.  

The Smokeys

Greg Mays (Forestville Eagles)

Yet to win the award – one season he will finally recieve the votes he deserves and this could be the year. We think he’ll poll eleven times giving him a good chance too but DJ and teammate Uche Dibiamaka may again get in the path to the top award but history always plays a part in the top gongs as we know.

Jacob Rigoni (Sturt Sabres)

He’s gone to another level has the Adelaide 36er and a preview of what we will see in his additions to his game in NBL25. Rigoni started the season on absolute fire likely picking up votes in his first five games. That total’s somewhere between 11 to 13 times whilst also doing plenty without basketball in hand. A handy advantage indeed and one of two standouts for the Sabres in 2024.

Akoldah Gak (West Adelaide Bearcats)

When you look at the Bearcats and the consistent performances – the one who was there out of the big “3” stands out despite the presence of both Anthony Drmic and Fabian Krslovic. This is where maybe the votes may slip away from Gak however his importance can’t be understated given Lachlan Olbrich’s absence this season. That may stand out to the vote casters and perhaps Gak is much closer to the top than we think. At 21 years of age he could possibly walk away with two medals in the one night.

Keep An Eye on

Branden Jenkins (Central Districts Lions)

More games have been won by Centrals this year and like last season Jenkins will still poll very strongly (at least eight times) having always stayed amongst the best players nightly. This time around he’s got some stiff competition in the second half of the season with Magnus Richards and Koen Sapwell taking some off him. Jenkins has however all-rounded his game a little more this year. That could be worth a watch from the outside looking in.  

Sharif Black (Woodville Warriors)

Started the season with a bang and showed vote grabbing potential in every significant performance of his in the season. He was clearly the best for the Warriors throughout their strongest performances in the season however there were also some lower numbers which may hurt him being right up in the top echelon this season.  

Uche Dibiamaka (Forestville Eagles)

If I am looking for someone that maybe in our calculations might be not right up there but could be – then the Eagles dynamic guard fits that description. His impact in games was much larger than the stats suggested and also had big numbers on nights when others did on paper. Impact is always down to the voter casters and that’s where he might be a bigger smokey than we think.

The Winner is… Alex Starling

Starling does it at both ends of the floor and that’s where the key advantage he has over the others might be. His team finished top and he was there from the very start of the season and finally – he’s likely to get three votes at least close to ten times given the other numbers surrounding those matches and that we can’t guarantee with the other competitors. If it does happen it will be the tenth medal for the club and first player to win it at three different clubs in the history of the league.

We want to continue our work telling the stories of SA Basketball this winter and beyond with world championships, local legends, NBL and WNBL previews, reviews and NBL1 off season news and predictions – Can you PLEASE HELP US with a shotclock sub of $14 or $24 a year to help us do this?

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“All about Ability – the last five year’s of the Men’s Ivor Burge Program”

“The all-time Adelaide Lightning All-Stars Team – Naming the team of the past 30 years of Adelaide Lightning players”

Eight new $24 Shotclock subscribers will have the remaining of piece produced on the topic of

Photo originally supplied by Rachael Sporn for ESPN Australia

Another eight new $24 Shotclock subscribers or contributors directly will have both pieces done for production

Please DM if you’d like to support another way than subscription

See if you can provide the assist we need to tell the South Australian Basketball story

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2024 Halls/Woollacott Medal Awards Preview

While the two prime awards in the Halls and Woollacott are always the feature, there are also several other awards to consider including MVP, DPOY, COTY, Youth Medals, Officials Medals and All-Star Fives. Here’s the predictions ahead of Sunday’s event…

Photo Credit – As Supplied

3-Minute Read

MVP

The Most Valuable Player Awards for the League are determined by a system in which each team’s head coach allocates votes after each minor game of the season. After the completion of the minor rounds a list of the top 15 vote recipients is compiled, based on this voting system and sent to each team’s head coach who then allocates 3-2-1 votes to players for this award from that list.

Based on this here is the list of my candidates MVP for Womens and Mens

Womens

Previous winner – Brooke Basham (North Adelaide Rockets)

Brooke Basham

Having often taken out the Rockets best player on a weekly basis – she is a very strong chance to go back-to-back in MVP calculations. Will be in the final 15 and when you look at the impact of when she plays well and what equates to a Rockets win – in the nine wins she’s been involved in she averages 21.8 points at 48 percent. The next best is Freer and Mansfield with 14 points in those wins – good numbers to backup the argument for back to back.

Emily Saunders

She’s just been voted the Norwood Flames best player for 2024 and that’s due to a majority of games even when her team lost. She averaged 11.4 points and 10.1 rebounds per game as an import that has been truly valuable to a team lacking the inside presence of their 2023 championship centre Jada Rice. A solid selection if your looking at a per team most valuable choice.

Maddy Freer

Freer has had another outstanding year contributing across the board in multiple categories. Freer averaged 13.2 points, 8.1 rebounds, 2.8 assists, two steals and 1.3 blocks and was strong in an Eagles defensive unit that was #1 in the league.

Mens

Previous Winner – Jordan Forbes (Sturt Sabres)

Sharif Black

Similar to the Basham/Saunders argument I’d hate to know where the Warriors would be without the contribution of the dynamic guard. Averaging 22.9 per game and scoring 24 points or more on nine occasions – guarding him was a nightmare for opposition coaches. Will also likely be in the final 15 and be amongst the contenders for this award.

Magnus Richards

A huge reason across the season consistently why the Lions have been able to make the finals for the first time since the mid 2010s. Richards with the likelihood of polling eight times across the season would also accumulate votes in this award in the Lions losses. He averaged 17.4 points, 8.2 rebounds and 1.3 steals and played some outstanding defence throughout the season for the Lions. Only reason he might not get it is teammate Branden Jenkins but it’s all going to come down to who the coaches value most in their votes.

Alex Starling

Not only a contender for the main award – MVP sits well considering his impact at both ends of the floor. Elevating his numbers from 2023 to 23.2 points per game, 11.9 rebounds, 3.6 assists, 2.8 steals and 1.4 blocks per game – plus who can you genuinely say from the Panthers won’t keep the three votes per match consistently from him?

Best Defensive Player of 2024

Best Defensive Player Award (Womens)

Previous Winner – Tayla Brazel (Sturt Sabres)

  • Lily Ritz – A big that can steal the ball 3.06 times per match on average (#1) plus was number three in rebounds (11.12)
  • Tayla Corrigan – Big problem in the paint this season for teams – recorded 1.94 blocks per game including a league high nine in one match
  • Maddy Freer – In the #1 defensive team in the league, two steals per game along with 1.33 blocks (#3) plus played undersized against the league’s bigs and won over three quarters of her contests against them.

Best Defensive Player Award (Mens)

Previous Winner – Alex Starling (South Adelaide Panthers)

  • Jordan Forbes – Runner up last year to Starling, #3 in the league for steals with 2.44 and has been the prime shutdown guard for the opposition.
  • Greg Mays – Part of the #1 defence in the league, does is it all and is a consistent rim protector
  • Alex Starling – Block parties, dominated rebounding and high in the steal count at the defensive end of the floor. He’ll be every chance to go three in a row.

Youth Womens and Mens Medals

The Merv Harris (women) and Frank Angove (men) medals are presented to the NBL1 Central player aged Under 23 years on December 31 of the year in which the competition is played, who polls the highest number of votes towards the Halls or Woollacott medal.

Merv Harris (U23 Womens) Medal

Previous winner – Maddy Freer (Forestville Eagles)

  • Jess Simons – Fantastic year for the Lightning DP – could she be the fourth Eagle to win it in consecutive years?
  • Maddy Freer – Even higher finish than her win last year in the Halls medal – very good chance to emulate former teammate Sam Simons and go back to back
  • Tayla Levy – Raging favourite, breakout season, likely top five finisher in Halls – it’s all there

Frank Angove (U23 Mens) Medal

Previous winner – Lachlan Olbrich (West Adelaide Bearcats)

  • Owen Raneburg – Huge breakout season, will gain some votes for big time performances, close to one of the league’s best sixth men of the season
  • Akoldah Gak – Team has made finals, he’s a big reason why and will poll plenty of threes this Woollacott count – a warm favourite…
  • Steve Parfitt – Huge year number wise averaging a double double of 11 points and 10.9 rebounds per game – ultra consistent performer.  

Coach of the Year

The “Coach of the Year” is awarded based on 3-2-1 votes by fellow coaches at the end of the minor rounds.

Womens (Previous Winner: Tim Shortt (Sturt Sabres)

  • Joe Noone – Defying history by taking a club from last place into their first finals since 2012, wavered the oncoming pressure after a fast start and recruited savvy once again to really shake up the league.
  • Georgia Crouch – Took the Eagles to #1 in the league defensively and #3 offensively after ranking fourth and fifth in 2023 – majority of the season without a genuine centre as well.
  • Tim Shortt – The argument here is that they’ve finished top two again minus Tayla Brazel and have also gotten games into new talent like Mia Walker-Roberts and Paige Padroth.   
  • Mark Billington – The second half of the season turned for the West Adelaide Bearcats – took the Bearcats to a 6-3 record after the halfway point and helped them finish top three in defensive rating with 81.1. That’s all after taking the reigns from Mel Downer carrying on turning the Bearcats into the most dangerous side outside the top five in the second half of the season.  

Mens (Previous Winner: Paul Rigoni (Sturt Sabres)

  • Graham Kubank – Did some management in the first half of the season without some key pieces and was under huge pressure coming in to take over from 36ers coach Scott Ninnis. He pulled it all together in the second half of the season to finish with nine straight wins to finish top of the table.
  • Rupert Sapwell – The Lions have struggled to finish it off by season’s end and this year they did so. Any coach that guides a side to a finals appearance after missing multiple years must be in consideration.
  • Paul Rigoni – Can’t talk COTY without looking at a previous winner who continues to get the most out of the talent he has. Already won this four times (2016, 2017, 2021 and 2023) so a fifth is not beyond the realms of possibility.
  • Ryan Meakin – I’m looking at this one in club context – the Mavs have had their most successful season record wise since before 2010 with six wins in the season. No matter what personnel you have you still have to overturn history with it and they have done so the Mavs through Meakin.

Phillip Yuill Medal

The “Referee of the Year” is awarded based on 3-2-1 votes by coaches at the end of the minor rounds.

  • Women – Chelsea Nicholls, Matt Hubner and Andrew Just
  • Men – Nathan Durant, Bailey Dyer and Nathan Davis  

All Star Five

Men – (2023: Forbes, Jenkins, Drmic, Starling, Olbrich)
o Jordan Forbes
o Jacob Rigoni
o Fabian Krslovic
o Alex Starling
o Daniel Johnson

Women – (2023: Yaeger, Basham, Wilson, McKendrick, Williams)
o Tayla Levy
o Brooke Basham
o Casey Samuels
o Brittany Hodges
o Emily Saunders

We want to continue our work telling the stories of SA Basketball this winter and beyond with world championships, local legends, NBL and WNBL previews, reviews and NBL1 off season news and predictions – Can you PLEASE HELP US with a shotclock sub of $14 or $24 a year to help us do this?

NEW – PITCH TO THE PUBLIC ✍️👂

It takes 4 hours a week to write, research and produce our content but we want to write extra content this next few months so we thought we’d pitch to the public

Here are the next lot of articles up for pitching – subscribe to get these written

“All about Ability – the last five year’s of the Men’s Ivor Burge Program”

“The all-time Adelaide Lightning All-Stars Team – Naming the team of the past 30 years of Adelaide Lightning players”

Eight new $24 Shotclock subscribers will have the remaining of piece produced on the topic of

Photo originally supplied by Rachael Sporn for ESPN Australia

Another eight new $24 Shotclock subscribers or contributors directly will have both pieces done for production

Please DM if you’d like to support another way than subscription

See if you can provide the assist we need to tell the South Australian Basketball story

All Episodes of the SA Shotclock available on podcasting platforms in the coming months