Doing things in remembrance of him

Forgetting seems to be a common theme for many of us in everyday life. The viewpoint of how these things are forgotten varies from person to person in importance and the impact that has in others is also felt in various ways.

Then there are things that are forgotten that actually matter…

We forget everyday things such as keys, phone, meeting times, appointments, our lunch the list seems endless at times. In basketball we forget plays, scouts, actions, team rules and training, match & event times. There are things like people’s birthdays, wedding dates & promised times with loved ones.

Then there are things that are forgotten that actually matter – some of the things above again are seen in this light by any person. For me that has come to the fore over several years and again was reflected to me even stronger in the lead up to this Easter period.

It started last Sunday where for the first time unexpectedly in many years I had the opportunity to be part of an annual event down in Brighton on Jetty Road. Many of our churches including my local church Lighthouse gather together on the Sunday morning before the final Easter week to walk together with some donkeys and palm leaves – enacting in some ways a significant moment in the bible for our beliefs.

A volunteer was needed to hold a palm leaf and sway it from side to side – I felt the need to raise my hand but not quite sure why.

And then as I walked up Jetty Road swaying that palm leaf it hit me.

Everyone either side of the road either stopped or stared or smiled or laughed even – why???

Some remember and some forget why.

I would guarantee there would be people watching going “oh that’s a nice parade, no idea what for” or “here’s something to put on social media” or ” what a waste of time with that religious stuff” or even “Don’t they look funny with their singing and palm leaves walking by.” Some might even be “what right do they have to do this?” or “They are just shoving it in our faces” and even more aggressive reactionary responses.

After that moment though – how many would actually talk about why they feel that way with their coffee, walking or bike riding companion. My biggest fear is that after a fleeting moment of that event being viewed – most likely nothing more would be said about it. Too many times we see something and just go “well that happened what’s next?” and instantly forget it happened instead of deeply considering there is some value to what has just happened.

Our whole human exterior I believe is built for curiosity and to question by design and to make sense of things in a natural manner. This Easter however there will be many that will see this weekend flash by then forget to question why we have these public holidays and long weekend.

It’s no secret publicly that my faith and basketball mix together in all I do and the Thursday at Easter has taught me some valuable lessons of what to remember and what to forget. One year I admittedly prioritised basketball over a church service which when you look at it in isolation seemed okay however had a bit of a rolling affect of understanding the importance of this time. Every year since then I’ve made myself unavailable for anything like that and have been very open about why it’s the case.

This year I had that challenge again coming into the Easter period and it was even harder. I had a last minute text to help with a game commentating and with the doors of the Marion Stadium likely to close on Thursday night for the last ever game of NBL1 – both my worlds collided. Marion all be it a small part of my journey to this stage was where I was court announcer for South Adelaide for a few years, met some players that I’ve done Baptist carnival with, have some personal memories from my playing days with SA Church Stars and indeed as a person working in the City of Marion community have a large affinity for.

Yet I never want to forget why I have what I have and who has given that to me and it may seem a little over zealous to some or rigid in thinking but for me I’m not the creative person or man I am today without the one who gave his life for me. Hence every year no matter what is going on that’s also important to me or I am needed for – I make myself unavailable and attend my church to read a section of scripture at my church by candlelight on the Thursday night before Good Friday.

This year I was able to do this either side of the Marion NBL1 game which in some ways was a redemption of my past failings because since then I have placed my saviour above worldly things at this time. It reminds me of the importance of doing things to remember the things that matter not only this week annually but also everyday of my life. I also see that there will be a day where these things we do like walking Jetty Road with palm leaves and reading scripture by candlelight in public places like our church will sadly be no more as the world moves on or even prevents this from happening.

In our Good Friday message we were reminded about how the soldiers played games at the foot of the cross for Jesus’s things

When the soldiers crucified Jesus, they took his clothes dividing them into four shares, one for each of them, with the undergarment remaining. This garment was seamless, woven in one piece from top to bottom.

“Let’s not tear it,” they said to one another. “Let’s decide by lot who will get it.”

This happened that the scripture might be fulfilled that said, “They divide my clothes amount them and cast lots for my garment.” So this is what the soldiers did.

 – John 19:23-24 NIV

We were encouraged to take home a dice or small palm cross from our service as a reminder of the above – I chose this dice to take home to remind myself that chance and luck are not God’s way and its not these I do or where I am situated today in life.

As I want to remember to keep doing things in remembrance of him and not forget these in an instance. This Easter with all this information we are bombarded with daily, moments we witness and things we try to remember why we do – can we really afford to not at least stop to question why we do these things to remember why we have this Easter before any chance to do so is completely forgotten…

NBL1 Central Round One Womens – McKendrick magic return runs over Lions

The magical return of Mollie Mckendrick rose the Southern Tigers to an opening round win over the Central Districts Lions in their first Safari Cup matchup of 2026 – 85-63 at the Cage.

Photo provided by @justbphotoau

3-Minute Read

The Tigers unleashed in the first term with the new one-two strike of returning Tiger Mollie McKendrick and the double double machine of Holly Forbes as the pair combined for 25 points in the opening term. The Lions new import that the Den fans will fall in love with in Grace Stone made her impression and intentions clear early with some huge triples in the first quarter – three in all however the Tigers had the first swipe 32-18 after one. 

Romancing the Stone: The Lions fans got a small glimpse into the game of Grace Stone from the NBL1 West Perry Lake Hawks – Photo by Melissa Belanic

McKendrick continued to wreck havoc inside the paint and at the mid-range as she peeled off turnaround jumpshot and layup after layup contested with the home side jumping out to a game high 31 point with another returnee Rosie Williamson (Five points, nine assists & six steals) delivering the dimes and deliveries for the paint providers. The Lions continued to pepper from beyond the arc with varying degrees of success but trailed 58-30 at the main change.

It didn’t get much prettier from there as the Tigers answered each Lions attempt to reduce the margin. Stone and one sister for another recruit in Terran Wright (Eight points & five rebounds on return from NBL1 North & UBL) tried to reel it back in but Sophie Rogers (Eight points & four rebounds) triple and more Forbes free throws extended back out to 31 points and an unassailable 69-41 three quarter time lead.

Paw Paint Paired: The Southern Tigers re-added former import Holly Forbes in the off season and got their first look at the paint pair in their opening round win – photo by Melissa Belanic

The Lions came out in the fourth with split and pride in mind led by Emily & Georgia Winter with Tiahna Sears (eight points & 11 rebounds) in limited minutes refinding her feet however Williamson capped off the win with some points of her own delivering first time head coach Dan Cahill a first up win in 2026. 

It all revolved around the Tigers big paint paws of Mckendrick (28 points at 63 percent & nine rebounds) and Forbes (26 points, 10 rebounds & six steals) with plenty of support from the likes of Annie Bartsch with Eight points, seven rebounds & three assists), Williamson and Filipino recruit Jaz Joson.

Stone for the Lions was the leading player of the night for the away side with an impressive debut of 19 points with six triples at 50 percent & four rebounds with Alex Howden contributing 10 points, three assists & steals.

 The numbers that mattered 

  • The Tigers through their “Paw Paint Pair” of Mckendrick and Forbes guided them to 56 percent from 2pt range and 18 of 25 from the free throw line
  • Tigers ball movement was on point with 20 assists 
  • Lions lived and died by the three point line shooting nine of 42 from beyond the arc
  • In the first half McKendrick and Forbes combined for 40 points in the first half of the Tigers 58
  • 85 is the highest score team score for the Southern Tigers since 101 points against the Woodville Warriors in 2024   

The Three Takeaways 

  • Bring on the “Paw Paint Pair” of McKendrick and Forbes in a return to old fashioned paint oriented hoops
  • Lions need an inside presence which they’ll get later into the season but need it quicker
  • Continuity & familiarity are the keys to accelerating a side’s development in a new season – the Tigers may have plenty of new faces from last season but plenty of these players have played together before or are connected and it shows

SOUTHERN TIGERS 85 (McKENDRICK 28, FORBES 26, BARTSCH, ROGERS 8, WILLIAMSON 7)

CENTRAL DISTRICTS LIONS 65 (STONE 19, HOWDEN 10, SEARS 8, T WRIGHT 7)

WE NEED TO CONTINUE TO TELL THE STORIES OF THE NBL1 CENTRAL

Every game deserves to be reported on including the history and background of the league – in 20 years time we may find it very difficult to look back at history and find data (as we are finding already in searching for past results and impact) so writing these articles is essential for capturing the essence of the league.

We have 300 plus players on lists of the NBL1 Central – $5 a week from every player and the NBL1 community will help you make sure you get written about by a local who knows the league in and out and has been active in the space the last five years and beyond. We need your support with more so please consider our options or consider sponsoring the website which also has an accompanying podcast and broadcasting of the NBL and WNBL through the Collective group.

All Episodes of the SA Shotclock now available on Spotify

NBL1 Central Round One Mens – Warrior debutants dominate Flames in ARC assault

The Woodville Warriors dominant second half was the catalyst to dismantle the new look Norwood Flames 60-98 at the ARC.

Photo provided by @heathshotit

3-Minute Read

It was the Flames new import face in University of Chicago Thomas Kurowski that made the first move though with a strong opening stanza of nine points but it didn’t take long for Machar to make his mark with a triple backed up by new imports COE College Bennett Sherry and defensive dime out of Europe LJ Booth as the Warriors edged in front 18-19 at the first change. 

The second term was the all-star above the rim show with Kurowski opening the second term before Joe Jackson threw down the one handed on his right and Booth finished with two hands as well off the pass – but none were as high octane and aerial as Machar as he soared above all for the one handed right hand slam

Nick Wurm broke it up with a triple only to be met by veteran Daniel Webber with one of his own. Campbell Scott (Nine points, six rebounds & three assists) the New Zealand guard for the Flames under new head coach kiwi himself Miles Pearce made his own then Booth splashed one in response to make it 34-38 at the half time interval. 

Machar drained another triple to open the third with Booth always active on the glass and a much needed inclusion for the Warriors in the absence of Steve Partfitt. Uzo Dibiamaka and Wurm with big time pushes to kick it out to 36-50 and a 2-12 run. New Flames import Inady Legiste broke the run but the Warriors began to assert control with Machar dropping another triple and finished the strong quarter with an easy layup to leave it 44-64 with one to go. 

The pain continued to pile on for the Warriors who’s defensive chemistry with its core undid the Flames new unit despite Kurowski continuing to tick the scoreboard over. Machar took advantage with his breakout game as the Warriors and Flames both cleared the bench with Bailey Nathan making some additions late for his first points including a triple off the back of another excellent UBL showing for the Adelaide Waatu as the Warriors secured their biggest win against the Flames in multiple years. 

From the pine it was a strong showing from Awak Machar with 22 points and three triples, nine rebounds & three assists while an impressive double double debut from LJ Booth with 19 points and 10 rebounds was paired with five offensive rebounds. Dibiamaka showed he’s ready to rise the level with 14 points, 11 rebounds & six assists.

Kurowski was consistent through four quarters in his first appearance with 24 points, seven rebounds and four steals plus some strong finishes but no other Flame made double figures in a lean night.   

 The numbers that mattered 

  • The Flames had five players with five or more but only Kurowski made double figures
  • This is the Warriors biggest win against the Flames since pre 2015 with the average margin around 12 points per game since then between the two
  • The Warriors shot the ball at 50.98 percent from 2PT range while the Flames only 31.7 
  • The second half was where this was won with the Warriors defence marching them to a 60-26 domination     

The Three Takeaways 

  • The grit and grind of the Warriors is the key to their success again in 2026
  • Kurowski showed he can be a legit fire in this league
  • Machar with additional athleticism is ready to show what he’s about on a more than regular basis

NORWOOD FLAMES 60 (KUROWSKI 24, SCOTT 9) 

WOODVILLE WARRIORS 98 (A MACHAR 24, UZO DIBIAMAKA 14, SHERRY, WURM 9, MELDRUM 8, JACKSON 7)

WE NEED TO CONTINUE TO TELL THE STORIES OF THE NBL1 CENTRAL

Every game deserves to be reported on including the history and background of the league – in 20 years time we may find it very difficult to look back at history and find data (as we are finding already in searching for past results and impact) so writing these articles is essential for capturing the essence of the league.

We have 300 plus players on lists of the NBL1 Central – $5 a week from every player and the NBL1 community will help you make sure you get written about by a local who knows the league in and out and has been active in the space the last five years and beyond. We need your support with more so please consider our options or consider sponsoring the website which also has an accompanying podcast and broadcasting of the NBL and WNBL through the Collective group.

All Episodes of the SA Shotclock now available on Spotify