Showing posts with label Mills. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mills. Show all posts

Friday, 22 June 2012

What is happening to the Tigers?


 (Sorry for the late posting, wedding preparation comes before the blog)

Back in the 1990s when basketball was at its highest there was a heated battle by three NBL teams for Melbourne’s heart – my North Melbourne Giants, the cool South East Melbourne Magic and the stalwart Melbourne Tigers.  These teams went head to head many times and the fans loved it.  The rivalry was almost as intense as AFL supporters and if you supported one team the others were less than scum.  Unfortunately as the interest in basketball waned in Australia the Magic and the Giants merged to form the Victoria Titans and then Titans that rivalry just wasn’t there.  It was the Tigers as THE Melbourne team with the Titans/Giants being on the backburner a little.  As we all know the Giants folded as well, leaving the Tigers as the sole owner of Melbourne.  This was a decent position for the fans to have as many Giants/Magic fans moved to the Tigers and were happy.  Regrettably this monopoly bred apathy from the club towards its fans and that all came to a head in the previous season.

Daryl Corletto
A lot has been said about the former owner Seamus McPeake and his antics but the two main incidents from the previous year were the Corletto and Ubaka scandals.  Daryl Corletto had been with the club since he was 16 years old and was a part of the culture for 10 years.  He was always the guy who came up with a big shot and was a genuinely nice guy when I met him quite a long time ago.   That all changed when NBA player Patrick Mills decided to sign with the Tigers and the team needed to cut someone.  So they went to Corletto and gave him a choice of being released and playing down in lower levels until Mills went back to the NBA or leave the club. 

How is that for loyalty?  He put a decade into the team and they turn around and kick him out for half a season of something better.  Not only that but Corletto told the Herald Sun that "It's got to do with the players when they leave ... they (Tigers officials) try to cover their own backs and make it look like it was the players that were in the wrong and wanted to leave” after the club claimed that he walked out after he wanted more money.  This kind of back stabbery will rear its ugly head later in this piece but to try and smear and a guy like Corletto is very poor work.  I thought that Corletto would have been an excellent companion piece to Mills with Mills’ driving ability opening up more shots for Corletto but I don’t think he minds much anymore as Daryl has since won the NBL Championship with the New Zealand Breakers.

Ayinde Ubaka
There is professionalism and unprofessionalism and then there is what Seamus McPeake did after the Tigers lost to the Gold Coast in January.  The story goes that after the Tigers lost by 13 points McPeake stormed into the players change rooms and furiously cussed at the players about how they were an “embarrassment” while pointing fingers at the team.  He then told Ubaka “to leave and go and find another job” effectively sacking the import on the spot without coach Trevor Gleeson’s and captain Tommy Greer’s knowledge.  After a while Ubaka went to see if he still had a job and unfortunately he had been officially terminated.  I don’t know about you but that is a terrible way to run a business.  The Herald Sun article goes to on to say that Ubaka has the support of the coach and players group but the players were afraid to speak up because they didn’t want to have McPeake’s wrath rain down of them.  Imagine at your workplace where the boss is so unprofessional that if something goes wrong he goes into a rage and sacks people on the spot without any consultation from other players and especially the coach and that the rest of the team were too scared to say anything because they might get sacked as well.  That boggles my mind that he was able to stay on as long as he did because I would hate to work in that environment and it must have put enormous strain on not only the on court team but all the employees of the Tigers from that point onwards.

Trevor Gleeson/Chris Anstey
I get that coaches are fired when the team aren’t going very well and are usually the first person to be blame for a team’s poor performance.  I get that.  What I don’t get is how the Tigers went about removing Trevor Gleeson from his position.  The off season started well with Chris Anstey being named the new Director of Basketball to work with Gleeson in making a competitive team.  So far so good, even if I dislike Anstey with a burning passion but that was mainly for his playing style and attitude so hopefully he can turn a new page in this new role.  He was even quoted in saying “I look forward to working with Trevor”.  Sure, that works. 

Then came the news that Anstey and Gleeson had not spoken at all and something was in the works.  What followed was eerily similar to what happened with Daryl Corletto.  The club started an investigation into Trevor Gleeson to see if he had committed any wrongdoings.  It was becoming clearer and clearer that the Tigers were trying to remove Gleeson from his multiyear contract without having to pay him the remainder of his money.  This went on for some time and it seemed inevitable that Anstey would become the new coach when this business was taken care of.  Luckily for Gleeson no infractions were to be found and were bought out of his contract, ushering in the reign of Anstey in the worst possible way.  What a backwards way to removing a coach and at the same time tarnishing their image even further.  So much for loyalty, stability and all those words that get bandied about but here they are just words and not something that gets put into action very often at The Cage.

What is funny is that all of this could have been solved at the start by sitting Gleeson down and telling him “unfortunately Trevor the club has decided to move in a different direction and we are going to have to let you go.  We thank you for what you have done with this team and we wish you luck in your future endeavours.”  Is that so hard?

The New Logo
This is a very small problem I have with the team but I couldn’t find anywhere else to put it so I’m putting it here.  What is up with the new logo?  It looks like something that could have been done in Microsoft Paint and put together with some clip art lettering.  What was wrong with the old one?  That was good and looked MUCH more professional than this one.  Two thumbs down from this blog.




Old Logo
New Logo

This team needs to pull itself together and quick before the second Melbourne team comes in a steals a fair chunk of their supporters.  If the Tigers do not right their wrongs before the Eastern suburbs team comes into the league don’t look for me at The Cage anytime soon.

Thursday, 10 May 2012

Post Season Review - Melbourne


The Season

Started well but then everything went horribly wrong.  By round seven they had a 6-3 record and were going gangbusters behind Patty Mills and Cameron Tragardh and The Cage was selling out as frequently as hotcakes.  Four straight losses had the team falling a bit but made up with it with three wins in a row to be sitting at a respectable 9-6 after round 13.  After that, the wheels fell off and it was a bloodbath.  The Tigers lost six straight before their next win and went 1-5 after that to finish a disappointing fourth last with an 11-17 record.  The last twelve rounds of the season had the team going 2-11 with fingers being pointed everywhere.

What went right?

They had five Dabster Award winners spread out between three players and for the first half of the season Cameron Tragardh was looking MVP worthy.  Patrick Mills brought along the hype and the casual fan as the stadium had a record number of full houses.  Liam Rush continued to grow and Ron Dorsey did something in the second half after his horrid first part of the season.

What went wrong?

It all started in the pre-season as Daryl Corletto was unceremoniously dumped from the team after they signed Mills, something I don’t think he has lost much sleep to after winning the championship.  The saga did put a black mark on the club and especially Seamus McPeake.  Continuing on with McPeake he also sacked Ayinde Ubaka after a loss which garnered plenty of negative press.  It was a stupid move for a guy who seems like he doesn’t care about the people in the club and thankfully he has now been separated from the team. 

On the court their second half was awful as new import Myron Allen tried his best but after a few good games didn’t do much to light the court on fire.  Tragardh went missing while Ron Dorsey didn’t live up to his hype from last season. 

Most Valuable Player

Even though he trailed off badly at the end of the season Cameron Tragardh was the main man for the Tigers.  He can score with the best of them and Melbourne needed that.  He also showed that he could be a leader after being named team captain.  He finished with an ER of 14.6 but was in the league top ten for most of the season.

Targets

With Tragardh defecting to Cairns and only Rush, Dorsey, Lucas Walker and Tom Greer re-signed for the coming season this team is pretty much starting from scratch.  Unfortunately all of their signed players are small forwards/sometime power forwards so the front office is going to have to fill a lot of holes before the coming journey.  Another unfortunate idea is that they are going to have to play some of these players at power forward, meaning if they don’t get a big body (maybe Luke Schenscher?) then the team is going to be very small.  As I have said with all the other teams so far the Tigers are going to need a good import guard to get the offence going and maybe a lights out shooting guard, whether import or local.  It’s pretty much getting any talent that isn’t a small forward at this stage for Melbourne.

Next Season

Unknown at the moment as they need to fill out most of the roster before that time.  Losing Tragardh hurts but if they can get some more talent and hopefully some height in their centre position then it could be a good one.  Right now I have no idea what next season is going to be like for the Melbourne Tigers.

Grade

C

Thursday, 24 November 2011

Patrick Mills - A Tribute

Everyone and their dog knows that Patrick Mills has been released from the Melbourne Tigers to further his career in China.  While I can see why he made the move I do think that it was a little scummy of him to go so soon.

For one he didn’t separate himself from the rest of the league enough to validate the pre-season hype.  Much like Harry Kewell for the Melbourne Victory who has only one assist and no goals in five games, Mills has failed to live up to his reputation of being unguardable and ‘NBA worthy’.  His numbers of 18.6 points and 5.0 assists are in the top level of the NBL but for someone who played in 64 games for the Portland Trailblazers they aren’t that impressive.  People expected Patty to put up 30 points a game and would light the world on fire.  Starting out he had numerous games of subpar shooting and his first three games he had more turnovers than assists.  Luckily for him his play improved with a 32 point game and three games with eight assists or more but he left before the naysayers could be shut up with his play.  42% from the field and 29% from three is just not good enough for any NBA player in the NBL.



However, the main reason why I am a little miffed is that after all this hoopla over Patrick Mills coming down from the NBA to help out his home country and the sport that needs a shot in the arm was extremely anti-climactic.  The first game of the season was sold out and there was a buzz in the air that was louder than the last decade of basketball but after two months that buzz has fizzled and Mills has lost his sheen and people are starting to turn.  Also, I feel like the Daryl Corletto saga was for nothing and the Tigers organisation will need to try hard to win back loyal fans now they have nothing to show for the jettison of Corletto. 



But at the end of the day Patty Mills has to look out for Patty Mills first.  He is only 23 years old and if he is getting paid the reported $1.25 million that is very hard to pass up for a low ranking league such like the NBL.  On the Xinjiang Guanghui Flying Tigers (which is a killer name by the way) there are notable names like Kenyon Martin and Quincy Douby with the league including players such as Stephon Marbury, Aaron Brooks, Wilson Chandler, Dan Gadzuric, JR Smith and Yi Jianlian.  No doubt he will get better exposure and a bigger challenge and combined with the uncertainty of the NBA contract situation where there is no guarantee that Mills will get a contract in the new NBA I can understand why he made this decision.



All is not lost for the Tigers as the shots that will be freed from Mills’ departure will mostly go to Ayinde Ubaka and Ron Dorsey so if you are needing someone on your Dream Team side then look for these two imports to improve their 9.1 and 8.3 ER respectively.  I believe that the Tigers’ play won’t drop off that much and neither will the overall impact of the NBL.  Sure Mills gave a huge boost but he didn’t back it up and so the public interest waned.  If Andrew Bogut is recruited then that is a different kettle of fish altogether...