Round 7 – Waatu women show future promise in prideful showing

One last round trip to NSW would end the Waatu women’s season – but they showed plenty of pride and potential in their final games…

Here’s how the Waatu Women fared in Round 7 in last round’s NSW road trip…

Norwood Flames Jemima Whitton was productive across both fixtures including getting a start in the final match - Photo provided by AU

Waatu women show future promise in prideful showing

The Waatu women hung tough for a half against a well-drilled UNSW before falling in the second half 78-54 at Alexandria. It was done by committee by UNSW in their final game of their inaugural season in the league with six players reaching double figures.   

Both teams went miss for miss in the opening four minutes with Caitlin Brines (11 points) and Meaza Otto (6 points) finally opening the score for both teams respectfully. Eleanor Pinkerton was strong in the paint for the home side registering three blocks in the opening quarter. A timeout called by coach Lachlan Coppick saw the Waatu reverse the trend, reeling off a quick 0-5 run to end the term all level 15-15.    

The second stanza was a dominant start from UNSW with guard Heather Smith (10 points, seven rebounds and five assists) taking control of the contest both with ball in hand and setting up others. Alice Sabine tried to get out on the fastbreak, continuously getting able support from Georgia Winter and Jemima Whitton. Brines however continued to keep the scoreboard ticking over as the home side led 32-29 just over the Waatu at the break.

An early finish from four offensive rebounds in a row to the Waatu with Winter the benefactor was about the only glimmer in the third. UNSW through Jasinta Haydardedeoglu (12 points and six rebounds) and team piled on a 22-10 term and was compounded by Waatu centre Petra Rychtarcikova fouling out to leave the Waatu small under the basket.  

With the damage seemingly done – the Waatu played freely running up a 0-7 run through Sabine and Otto to open the fourth. The home side resettled through Emily Nguyen and Haydardedeoglu sealing the win with plenty of minutes to play.

Nguyen led all scorers with 13 points and nine rebounds (four offensive) and along with Pinkerton with 12 points, 18 rebounds (seven offensive) and a huge seven blocks set up the win for the home side. Winter was terrific for the Waatu with 17 points and five rebounds as was Sabine with 13 points, 12 rebounds, three assists and steals and Whitton who just missed a double double with eight points, four steals and 10 rebounds. 

The Waatu brought what they produced in the first half for longer the next day as they took on USYD again one of the top sides of season 2024 at USYD Stadium.      

Against a powerful side coach Lachlan Coppick threw Whitton into the starting five and it paid dividends early at both ends of the floor. Alex Kayrouz, so impressive to watch in 2023 opened proceedings and was well supported by Lauryn Walker – a Sophia Hanna cut and score triggered an early timeout to Coppick and the Waatu. Sabine relished the moment, getting a transition score then cutting through the key for another then shortly followed it up with a hard drive on a scoop layup. She also just missed another transition layup on the buzzer of quarter time with 16-12 the final scoreline for the quarter.

Waatu burst out of the blocks in the second with Petra Rychartickova powering up for two, Winter making a corner triple and Sophie Hampel making a scoop layup finish to leave it 18-19. The Renee Garlepp coached side put the onus on Caitlyn Martin and Holly Wills (15 points with three triples) but equally impressive was Sabine with some and1 finishes, offensive glass work with soft touch finishes that kept the Waatu in it 31-29. The first half was arguably the most impressive of the season.

Both teams hit back at each other early in the third with the Ws of Whitton and Winter keeping the Waatu in touch. It took Martin again and Wills triple to put breathing space between them and the Waatu that refused to go away 56-48 at end of three.

The opening two and a half minutes might have finally broken the resistance with Wills hitting  consecutive triples and Alex Oliver (11 points and eight rebounds) not getting any smaller as the game rolled along to push USYD out to 64-51. Winter hit a huge long bomb but Martin and Kayrouz’s class shone through in the final term with the latter collecting nine points. The final scoreline 89-59 was not reflective of the strong three quarter effort by the Waatu in their final game of the season.

Martin was all control at the point position with 16 points, 10 assists and six steals with Kayrouz finishing with 15 points, four assists and steals. The complete games of Sabine (18 points, 14 rebounds with seven offensive and fours assists) and Winter (21 points with six triples and seven rebounds) kept the Waatu in it for a long period of time.

While the Waatu women’s season finishes it produced the strongest performance of a UBL campaign in their short existence in the league. Next year looms as a big game changer with plenty of talent entering their first year of university with many likely to be back for another swing at it in UBL 2025. 

RD 7 Women UNSW 78 (Nguyen 13, Haydardedeoglu, Pinkerton 12, Brines 11, Bidwell, Smith 10) defeated AU Waatu 54 (Winter 17, Sabine 13, Whitton 8)

RD 7 Women USYD 89 (Martin 16, Kayrouz, Wills 15, Walker 14, Oliver 11) defeated AU Waatu 54 (Winter 21, Sabine 18, Whitton 7)


Catch all of the Waatu’s Women’s games from the season on Uni Sports TV

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SA Shotclock – EP26 – Mays the force is with Forestville

Catch another episode of the SA Shotclock including the latest on SA’s local basketball leagues.

TP is joined by now regular co-host Kerry once again to chat Round 7 of the NBL1 Central and preview Round 8, discuss the recent success of SA players in selection and achievement, the Adelaide Waatu’s finals push in the Mens and Womens for UBL 2024 plus whether the latest moves in the WNBL will affect the basketball landscape.

We also have one of the interviews of the season – a long-standing player in the league who lets his basketball do the talking but there is so much more to the man, the myth, the “underrated” Greg Mays of the Forestville Eagles.

Plus all your regular Basketball South Australia news and updates including a little trip to Adelaide Airport to keep an eye on the international arrivals gate…

Photo Credit – Snap Shot Photography / @snapshotphotography31

Show List

0:00 – Introduction

4:00 – SA Basketball News

18:50 – UBL Round 7 – The Finals Push

30:00 – The Terminal

44:00 – Interview with Forestville Eagles Greg Mays

1:06:10 – NBL1 Central Women Round 7 Review

1:17:00 – NBL1 Central Men Round 7 Review

1:30:20 – Round 8 NBL1 Central Preview and Tips

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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“The Powerhouses of SA School Basketball” (Looking at the last five to ten years of school basketball)

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Round 6 –  Home fortress held as Waatu eye finals

Both Adelaide Waatu teams with wins would keep themselves in the finals race with their final home games of the regular season – the women with a slice of short history on the line and the men trying to make sure they held home court advantage heading to the finish line of season 2024…

Were the Waatu able to hold their home fortress?

Here’s how the Waatu fared in Round 6 at the State Basketball Centre…

Winter strikes from deep early - Georgia Winter hit 15 points in the opening quarter to setup a historic win for the Waatu Women - Photo provided by AU

Superb Sabine and Wonderful Winter bring start to new era

The Waatu Women were eyeing off their second win of the season and managed to grab it at the conclusion of the match with a thrilling 81-74 win over the RMIT Redbacks at the State Basketball Centre.  

After a close basket for basket opening with Georgia Winter (Veterinary Technology) and Jolie Brown (7 points) – it was Winter that dominated the opening stanza with 15 points at 75 percent with three triples to have the Waatu just in front 24-21. 

The second was again a trading of basket for basket with conscious effort being applied on Winter by the Redbacks at the defensive end of the floor. That left Alice Sabine (Medicine) to reel off nine points and five rebounds for the term with NBL1 South Ringwood Hawks Mikayla Peterson scoring 13 points and grabbing seven rebounds for the half to keep the Redbacks within a few baskets 45-38 at the main break. The Waatu did a good job containing Emma Carr who had hurt some opposition in the past fixtures. 

The tightness in the contest continued with another couple of faces emerging in the second half with the Waatu’s Jemima Whitton (Viticulture and Oenology) adding six points and couple of blocked shots but the Redbacks Kaityln Bickerton kept them in striking distance with 10 points for the quarter to leave it at 64-58 with one to play. 

The Waatu set themselves up for victory early in the fourth with 11-0 courtesy of Whitton who reeled off eight final quarter points but Peterson did her best to chase the Redbacks into the game closing it down to the final minutes. The Waatu holding their nerve as Whitton made a couple of her late baskets to get their second win in a season in their short history 81-74 in the finish. 

Through four quarters Sabine produced the numbers again with 24 points, 17 rebounds (six offensive), six assists, three steals and three blocks with Whitton’s second half giving her best numbers of the season with 17 points, 10 rebounds (five offensive), four steals and two blocked shots. Winter set the ball rolling early to finish with 22 points with four triples, nine rebounds, four steals and three assists. 

Peterson for the Redbacks was powerful through the contest with 27 points, 13 rebounds, five steals with Bickerton finishing with 15 points, seven rebounds and two steals. Brown fouled out of the match early in the fourth to finalise 15 points, nine rebounds and four blocked shots. The Waatu capatilsing on the turnovers best in the match with 12 points from turnover and winning the rebounds 68-52 with a 31-17 offensive rebound count the key statistic in the wrapup.    

The Women sit 10th now on the table with a 2-5 record but with a roadtrip against UNSW (8th) and Sydney Uni (2nd) coming up this week over the border in NSW – the Waatu can finish with a 4-5 record. If the teams around them in CU playing UWA (13th) & UNISC (12th), VU playing UTAS (1st), MUBC (11th) playing UTS (3rd) drop their games to teams this week – you just never know the Waatu may sneak into the final seventh or eighth place. 

It’s all in their hands as they head across the hay plains…                    

RD 6 Women AU Waatu 81 (Sabine 24, Winter 22, Whitton 17, Brooks 7) defeated RMIT Redbacks 74 (Peterson 27, Bickerton, Brown 15, Carr 10)

Kourani helps Waatu hunt second consecutive finals appearance with win over Redbacks 

The Waatu Men grabbed their fourth win of the season setting up a possible second consecutive finals appearance with a strong 101-91 win over the RMIT Redbacks at the State Basketball Centre.  

After another tight opening five minutes trading blow for blow – the Waatu reeled off a 10-4 run thanks to sharp shooting high school star Emil Kourani (Occupational Therapy) with 11 points and three triples. That resulted in seven triples to have the Waatu in front 31-17 after one. 

The Redbacks started the better in the second with an 0-11 run thanks to Matt Gardner but turnovers gifted Ayual Garang (Architecture) who turned it on in the second with nine points as the high shooting percentages continued. Harry Bruce all business as usual with 12 points consisting of three triples, three rebounds and two steals kept the Waatu in front at a decent arm’s length 52-40 at the main break. The highlight of the half a Kourani two handed putback off an offensive rebound one for the instagram reelers…

A 16-8 opening five minutes led by Kourani (eight points) and the starters contributing saw the margin hit a game high 21-point-lead 76-55. RMIT had to respond and did accordingly via Nick Woodall with 13 points and six rebounds in the term but the Waatu’s three point shooting stayed at close to 40 percent with a manageable 76-64 lead at the last change. 

Kourani started the fourth feeling unconscious from outside the arc as he fired off another triple but the Redbacks also found their own microwave in Baden Swoboda who looked threatening in the final term as well. Gardiner and Woodall cut it back to an eight point margin but the Waatu closed it out through their starters to seal an important win to be over .500 for the season             

Kourani had his best game of the season with 29 points including seven triples and 13 rebounds well backed up by Bruce with 26 points with five triples, six rebounds and four steals and Garang with 16 points, seven rebounds and six assists. Plenty of role players had impact too with Isaac Hampel (Engineering) putting together 14 points, five assists and rebounds and Sam Davies (Nursing) with 16 points and eight rebounds. 

Woodall was the one who kept the Redbacks in it with 25 points, 14 rebounds and three assists as did Gardner with 22 points, nine assists and five rebounds. Nikita Yiannakoudakis “the football player” as he’s known as in the circles also was consistent all afternoon with 16 points and eight rebounds. The key statline for the Waatu that caused them to edge ahead was their 21 offensive rebounds to gain an extra 17 points.        

The Men sit 7th now on the table with a 4-3 record and with a roadtrip against UNSW (11th) and Sydney Uni (4th) coming up this week over the border in NSW the Waatu can finish with a 6-3 record. If the teams around them in UNISC (6th) playing CU (9th) & their other round match versus UWA (8th), UTAS (5th) playing VU (13th) drop their games in the correct sequence to teams this week – you just never know the Waatu may sneak into the top three and grab a possible inaugural home final… 

RD 6 Men AU Waatu 101 (Kourani 29, Bruce 26, Garang 16, Davies, Hampel 14) defeated RMIT Redbacks 91 (Woodall 25, Gardner 22, Yiannakoudakis 16, Jovic 8, Brennan 7)


Catch the Waatu’s seventh and final minor round games this week against UNSW and Sydney Uni on Uni Sports TV from Tuesday 1:30pm and Wednesday 11:30am.

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

Four new $24 Shotclock subscribers will have one of two pieces produced on the topics of

“SA Schools shine on Gold Coast” (Australian Schools Championships 2024)

“The Powerhouses of SA School Basketball” (Looking at the last five to ten years of school basketball)

Eight new $24 Shotclock subscribers 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