NBL1 Central Round One Womens – Eagle Simons takes flight to down Eastern Import onslaught

Despite the absence of some key players the Forestville Eagles have managed to hold off the late charge of the Eastern Mavericks 74-79 at St Francis De Sales.

Photo provided by CS Photographicaus

3-Minute Read

In shades of Carmen Tyson-Thomas of past seasons – the women got a great first up impression from new US import Antigonie “Tiggie” Sanabria & recently graduated Hawai’i Rainbow Wahine college import Brooklyn Rewers as they just sat behind the Eagles 23-25 after the first quarter.

Getting “Tiggie” with it in 2026 – This looks like it won’t be the first time either as Antigonie “Tiggie” Sanabria showed shades of former Mavs import Carmen Tyson-Thomas and we know what happened that year – Photo by CS Photgraphicaus

 

The game remained tight in the second with the Mavs extending their lead to double digits before the Simons sisters of Sam and Jess cut it to 44-39 at the main change. After an even third term 59-61 – the Mavs chance to beat the Eagles for the first time since 2019 was there as Sanabria cut it back to a two basket margin with only a few plays left.

Despite whittling it back the Eagles prevailed 74-79 with some close out plays and makes in the final minute.

Sam Simons was the player of the game with 28 points, nine rebounds, fours steals & three assists and in a sister act with Jess (14 points & six rebounds) got the job done for the Eagles to give new coach Matt Paps a first up win. Rewers (21 points & seven rebounds) & Sanabria (20 points & nine rebounds) led from the front for the home side.

 The numbers that mattered 

  • While the pair of Sanabria and Rewers had 41 between them the Mavs did get another 33 points from the rest of their lineup compared to the Eagles 
  • Olivia Tredrea with Sydney Hunter not quite ready to go collected a career high Seven points, six rebounds and assists in a strong 31 minute showing.  
  • The Eagles had 18 offensive rebounds and forced the Mavericks into 15 turnovers to create an additional 15 scoring opportunities 
  • The Mavericks took all of their 2pt shots inside the paint except for one for the match  

The Three Takeaways 

  • The Mavericks new import need to stay healthy for them to stay competitive 
  • The Eagles are still working out a new system including using heavier rotations through the bench 
  • It was a missed chance by the Mavericks with the Eagles missing a few key personnel and in the same breath a huge step forward for the cellar dwellers of 2025.

EASTERN MAVERICKS 74 (REWERS 21, SANABRIA 20, A WATKINSON 13, RAMSEY 7)

FORESTVILLE EAGLES 79 (S SIMONS 28, J SIMONS 14, R KING 12, VIDMAR 9, O TREDREA 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 Womens – Sabres steady in Nicola of time once again

It took till the second half but the Sturt Sabres finally saw off the South Adelaide Panthers 62-52 in a solid showing at Springbank.

Photo provided by @Picture It Sport Photography

3-Minute Read

The Sabres took control with a dominant 33-14 including a 20-2 stretch across the halftime period. 

It was the Panthers however that jumped out under new coach Scott Rattus on the Sabres missing Paige Padroth. The Panthers missing Argentinian centre Emmy Garcia Leon charged through the play of Kiera and Hannah Gardiner as the sister act went to work with eight points between them in the first term. Aimee Brett in return from the Cairns Dolphins in NBL1 North last season also looked strong in her distribution and attack on the basket despite Sabres skipper Nicola Mathews breaking her ankles with a smooth crossover move.

The Sabres however were off target from beyond the arc early were rushed into error as the Panthers took a 12-21 first quarter lead. 

The grind was real early in the second with both teams struggling to find scoring opportunities. Despite a welcome return of WNBL Betty Watson Breakout Player of the Year Tayla Brazel to the fold – the Panthers held a commanding 15 point lead with some great assistance from Bianca Stasinowsky and Woodville Warriors recruit Sophie Evans. Stasinowsky and Evans’ length troubled the Sabres, holding a 21-36 with 2:30 left in the second. That’s when the Sabres struck back through defensive maestro Zoe Walker-Roberts and Brazel as they edged the Sabres back into the contest with a quick 7-2 run to trail 29-38 at the main change. 

South Adelaide Panthers Sophie Evans provided a spark in Round One with a career high night in extended minutes – photo provided by @Picture It Sport Photography

ZWR and Brazel led the Sabres out of the break as the Sabres brought their colellective nature back to the fore with a stout 14-2 run. Brazel made one of the first triples from the night and it opened the gates as Nicola Mathews saw her opportunity to seize. With a young group and newish combination the Panthers spark in the first half looked to have gone out as last year’s runner ups grinded the game back in their favour. The Sabres took the lead back late in the fourth and held a 48-45 lead with one to play.

It was the Sabres turn to jump out of the blocks in the fourth with a 6-0 start as Katia Stamatelopoulos took control of the point position between the sides. In her second year the long guard was active with her hands and positional outworking her opponent on the floor. Given space to operate late however was Nicola Mathews as she drained a triple then made the tip in off the offensive rebound as the Sabres took game one of the season in a controlled and calm manner. 

In the Nicola of Time: Sturt Sabres Captain Nicola Mathews had a strong four quarter match with 19 points including an important triple in the final term – Photo provided by @Picture It Sport Photography

Mathews emerged as the player of the game with 19 points, 7 rebounds, 3 assists, backed up by Brazel with 10 points, 7 rebounds, 4 steals and 3 assists in a solid all-round return to the league. Zoe Walker-Roberts started on the pine but had her usual influence with 11 points and 7 rebounds with Stamatelopoulos churning out a handy nine points, four rebounds and two assists with two steals.

It was a bright start from Merv Harris medallist of 2025 Kiera Gardiner with ten points in the first half but finished with 12 points and eight rebounds as her influence was shut down in the second half. Stasinowsky had one of her best games in a long time with 7 points and 8 rebounds and the young core of Daisy Hocking (six points and nine rebounds) and Sophie Evans (Career high 7 points and four rebounds with expanded opportunity) showed some spark for South.

 The numbers that mattered 

  • This was the Sturt Sabres fourth win in a row against the South Adelaide Panthers since 2024
  • The Sabres took 34 attempts from beyond the perimeter but only made two for the night 
  • The Sabres trailed by 15 points but turned the game with a 20-2 stretch across the halftime break
  • The Panthers won the rebound count 50-36 including 11 offensive rebounds 
  • The Panthers had 26 turnovers compared to the Sabres 13 in the contest – the Panthers guards had 18 between     

The Three Takeaways 

  • Nicola Mathews timing is still and always impeccable when needed
  • Sophie Evans is a handy pickup for the Panthers
  • Panthers downhill style will be fun to watch but will take some time to put together over four quarters in terms of motoring management

STURT SABRES 62 (N MATTHEWS 19, BRAZEL 11, Z WALKER-ROBERTS 10, STAMATELOPOULOS 9, M WALKER-ROBERTS 7)

SOUTH ADELAIDE PANTHERS 52 (K GARDINER 12, COX 8, STASINOWSKY 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

The “Ball” is not in your court and what it could mean

“The ball is in your court” is a phrase I’ve reflected on a lot these past twelve months but what happens when it’s in someone else’s and you struggle with not knowing if it’s coming your way or whether it will.

It may be for a reason we are yet to see either if it does or doesn’t

Silence can be one of the hardest things to deal with in life, no doubt about it. The waiting for a job opportunity, making the team, taking that extra step in that application process from “thankyou for your application unfortunately you weren’t successful this time” to “Your application was successful. ” It’s always easy when we have control of these things and have the “ball in our court” and as a society whether we deny it or not – we are hungry for this in our lives. 

One of the great life lessons and skills is to let that go – but our desire for things on a daily basis that fill our basket of wants and also needs can often get in the way. We are often advertised as needing complete control of our lives, finances, desires, fulfillment, and satisfaction. The list is really endless when you think about it. I believe from my own personal experiences that’s where the anxiety when we don’t have this grows.

The list is really endless and never runs out once you get control of that thing something else crops up, then that thing and often that control you get creates another thing out of that vicious cycle. It becomes draining and tiring chasing the ball around trying to be the only one with it in your hands.

You then become bitter, angry, upset and ultimately stop growing in character when you chase something that feels like it can never end. What shapes this is the belief you can achieve ultimate control in your own stead – but our lives reflect daily that simply is not possible and also is fraught with caution in the relationships we have daily with others. 

On this Good Friday – Jesus had complete control of the situation even when he was hanging on the cross – you would remember the story of the two robbers who were hanging next to him – one assumed he would just exercise his control and come down from there but the other knew this is the point he was trying to make about our lives and the many he would save for the decision he was going to ultimately make.

“One of the criminals who hung there hurled insults at him: “Aren’t you the Messiah?” Save yourself and us!” but the other criminal rebuked him. “Don’t you fear God,” he said, “since you are under the same sentence? We are punished justly, for we are getting what we deserve. But this man has done nothing wrong.” Then he said “Jesus, remember me when you come into your kingdom.” 

Jesus answered him, “Truly I tell you today you will be with me in paradise” – Luke 23:39-43 NIV

In this one moment we see a convicted man relinquish the “ball in his court” and pass it to God because next to him was the one who shouldn’t even have to pass it or give up the open scoring opportunity – did the same by giving his trust in his very life to his Father in Heaven. 

There is far more context in this one moment that can be pulled apart including the other robber who couldn’t relinquish control himself –  however the key here is that if the one who always had the ball in his court chose to give it away to his father in heaven. 

Why can’t we? 

It is because of this one decision that we actually have freedom to have more balls in our courts to either score the open look, dish off to someone else to give them something they don’t have or make a play to get closer to the target in our life he wants to give us access to. 

Cause if you have the same ball constantly in your hands then how can someone freely pass you the one that grows your character, life opportunities, relationships and share his love with your community???

Sometimes the reason you have silence in your life journey is because someone out of nowhere is about to pass you the ball that God wants you to catch, hold onto for a bit then freely choose to pass on.

It’s called an assist for a reason – it’s the ultimate assist in life…