#WNBL18: Q & A with University of Sydney Flames coach Cheryl Chambers

The reigning WNBL coach of the year, Cheryl Chambers, again has her Flames side (currently 4th, 9-6) up to their necks in the finals race. Some familiar names (Belinda Snell, Asia Taylor) and returning Opal Katie-Rae Ebzery have all been productive, though a string of injuries and some close losses have presented obstacles as the side chases back to back titles. Here, Chambers talks to the site about life as defending premiers, the reshuffle caused by Tahlia Tupaea’s absence and more.

How have you found playing as defending premiers? Does it feel like you’re ‘the hunted’ now?

There is a bit of a sense of that, but I think the league is so good this year. To be quite honest, there are so many quality teams that it feels like everyone is hunted.

You’ve had a couple of close losses. Is a bit of an adjustment not having Leilani Mitchell there to get you through those clutch moments?

Absolutely, she was a star and we do miss her. I think the thing that has hurt us the most  though is that we wanted Tahlia Tupaea to play point guard, but she injured herself before the season started. We’re still hoping to get her back. But Leilani was a class act, so certainly any team would miss her.

Are you missing a bit of scoring punch with Tahlia Tupaea out?

Well I think Katie is doing a fantastic job as point guard, but the 2 is her preferred spot, that’s what we recruited her for, so it’s taken her out of her preferred position. As a team, we’ve lost a bit of our running game and are having to do things a little bit differently from what is natural to us. Having said that, we’ve been in most games, so it’s just a bit of massaging that’s needed.


Moved to point guard out of necessity, Katie-Rae Ebzery has ranked in the top 10 for both assists and steals.Moved to point guard out of necessity, Katie-Rae Ebzery has ranked in the top 10 for both assists and steals.

Moved to point guard out of necessity, Katie-Rae Ebzery has ranked in the top 10 for both assists and steals.

What does Katie-Rae bring to the team off court?

She’s been a real leader. As a 2-man playing the 1, she’s been doing a great job. She brings a lot of poise and a lot of experience, she keeps us together and she’s been fantastic.

It seems like Asia Taylor has gone up another level after a great season last year…

She’s developed and is certainly a better player than she was last year. We’ve been trying to help her with some of the 3-man skills, but you’re right, she’s got better every year. Jen Hamson as well, I think she has improved this year.

With Jen, she seems to have cut down the fouls lately. Is that something you’ve specifically worked on?

Yeah, we can’t have her sitting on the bench for that long. There had been a couple of games where we’ve been doing recovery the next day and it’s dawned on me she doesn’t need to do it because she’s been sitting on the bench with fouls so long.

We want to keep her out on the floor, so we’ve been working with her and she’s been making adjustments and now some of those 50-50 ones are not being called fouls any more, which is great.


Jen Hamson has led the league in blocks, with 2.47 per game.Jen Hamson has led the league in blocks, with 2.47 per game.

Jen Hamson has led the league in blocks, with 2.47 per game.

I thought Ally Wilson might have snuck into the Commonwealth Games squad. Is she far off that level?

No, she’s not. There’s a few around the league that would be in that next group. The European tours only allow for 18 players, so we’ll see in the next little while who is in the wider squad. But Alex is still working on her game and hopefully she can sneak into it.

How do you go about allocating minutes between the four guards (Hayley Moffatt, Sarah Graham, Susi Walmsley and Cassidy McLean) that you can bring off the bench in different games?

It’s been a bit hit and miss. Cassidy McLean has been doing her year 12, so we’ve hardly seen her, she’s been affected by that. Her development has been a little slowed, but that’s fine, we would certainly encourage any year 12 student to do their best. Her future’s bright and there’s lots of time for her.

With the bench, it just depends on what the team needs. They bring very different things. Sarah Graham is a pure, flat-out scorer and shooter, so we will bring her in when we need that. Hayley is more of a defender and Susi can come on and do a bit of backup 1, it just depends on what the game requires.

Sydney are only 7th in field goal attempts this year. It’s a very patient offence, but are you looking to get more easy transition points?

Absolutely (laughs). But our balance is a little out at the minute, with not having Tahlia. That’s the way it has to be right now, but hopefully we can sneak some wins and allow Tahlia to come back in and play some minutes.

Carly Boag has had some big games lately, do you think she’s in the best form of her career?

Yes, I do. She’s certainly been working hard and training hard, so when those things happen and you’ve built up that skill base, then when opportunity comes you can reap the rewards. That’s what’s happening now, she’s reaping the rewards.


Chambers, pictured here with the Melbourne Tigers, played 261 WNBL games before moving into coaching.Chambers, pictured here with the Melbourne Tigers, played 261 WNBL games before moving into coaching.

Chambers, pictured here with the Melbourne Tigers, played 261 WNBL games before moving into coaching.

Will you do anything differently ahead of the Double header (with the Sydney Kings) this weekend?

It’ll be different, it’s not really a home game for us, we have to travel to the other side of Sydney and we won’t be able to get on the court the morning of, it’s not our normal routine. But hopefully there will be a big crowd there and they’ll help get us over the line.

How challenging has it been managing fatigue with the shorter season?

It’s been a bit foreign and a bit different. The teams that have a bit more depth are in better shape now because they can share the minutes around. There’s not a lot of time to train, so it does make it especially difficult to work with your rookies when you’re on the road and you want to do a bit extra training with them, but there’s just no time. I think it’s something we just have to get used to. It is a learning curve.

WNBL: Cheryl Chambers on Sydney’s drought-breaking championship win.

When the questions ended and it was time for coach Cheryl Chambers and Asia Taylor to file out of the championship game press conference, the good-natured banter between the pair showed no signs of wrapping up. They couldn’t help themselves.

          This is the kind of chemistry that gets you championships and for the Flames, it was there almost from right from the start. Two games into the season, they had a team meeting to address the defensive lapses which saw them begin the season with a pair of losses. Yet the mood was one of complete confidence.

“We all looked around the room and thought ‘You know, this is a pretty special group’” Chambers says. “We had a mix of old players and young players, introverts and extroverts, but there has always been a pretty good feeling within the group”.

          The idea of creating a cohesive unit, that got on off the court and would play for each other, was central to putting the squad together and preparing for the season. “Teams that have won championships and been successful have great chemistry” Chambers says. “We did some weird and wacky things that would connect us”.

“We all looked around the room and thought ‘You know this is a pretty special group’” Chambers says.

          Beyond the chemistry, it was a shrewdly assembled group, both deep and balanced, giving Chambers, returning to WNBL coaching for the first time since 2009, a multi-faceted, shape-shifting team to work with.

The aforementioned Taylor ended up fitting the team like a tailor-made glove, but Chambers says signing the Louisville alum was a difficult process. “It was quite nerve-wracking” she says. “I always find it hard to recruit someone I haven’t physically seen so I kept saying to her agent ‘Can I see some more film?’ I wanted more and more film…but we were really keen to get an X-factor”


Asia Taylor had a quick first step that made her a handful; here she blows past Adelaide's Coleen Planeta.Asia Taylor had a quick first step that made her a handful; here she blows past Adelaide's Coleen Planeta.

Asia Taylor had a quick first step that made her a handful; here she blows past Adelaide’s Coleen Planeta.

          Taylor was all that and more, giving the Flames points in bunches and proving a nightmare matchup for every team with her explosiveness and deceptive strength. While Taylor was the team’s heat check wildcard, heady veterans Leilani Mitchell and Belinda Snell were invaluable steadying presences.

          Snell was entering her nineteenth season in top-flight basketball, but her game has always relied more on excellent fundamentals, high-level shooting and basketball smarts than raw athleticism and she remained mightily effective, ranking high in assists per game (5th), points per game (17th), and steals (13th).

          Snell’s ability to cover multiple positions was a key facet of a Flames team that could go big with strong rebounders like Shanae Graeves and Carly Boag teaming with Taylor and the imposing Jen Hamson in the frontcourt, and using Snell at shooting guard. They could also go small, playing multiple guards.

Most of the backcourt players rebounded well above their height, with Snell, Lauren Nicholson and Tahlia Tupaea all coming up with enough boards that teams couldn’t really punish their shorter lineups. Even the tiny Mitchell collected her share of long rebounds. Chambers said Snell ended up playing much more power forward than the team expected, but the team’s malleable nature proved a real asset.


Belinda Snell had more assists than any non point guard in the league. Here, she spots a Leilani Mitchell backdoor cut before anyone else and throws an exquisite pass.Belinda Snell had more assists than any non point guard in the league. Here, she spots a Leilani Mitchell backdoor cut before anyone else and throws an exquisite pass.

Belinda Snell had more assists than any non point guard in the league. Here, she spots a Leilani Mitchell backdoor cut before anyone else and throws an exquisite pass.

This off-season, Snell will be one of the assistant coaches for Sydney’s new SEABL team, the Sparks, and Chambers says she has the basketball knowledge to succeed in this new role. “If something’s not working on court, she’s always got an idea to fix it and it’s not always about her, she’s very selfless”.

Leilani Mitchell was also invaluable, playing the most minutes of any player in the league (1042). While every other team had a swoon at some point of the season which led to a run of losses, in the back half of the season Sydney started to do that thing all champion teams do: win games without coming close to playing their best. In matches against Melbourne, Canberra and Adelaide, they struggled for rhythm, but on each occasion Sydney had Leilani Mitchell and the opposition didn’t, so Sydney won.

          Chambers particularly remembers Mitchell’s nerveless approach as she hit the game-winner against Canberra: “She just coolly looked up and saw what he had in front of her and decided to run a closeout play”. The run of close wins gave the team irresistible momentum and by the grand final series they had won ten in a row and looked inevitable champions.


Leilani Mitchell consistently made big clutch plays. Here, she hits a game-winning jumper against Canberra. "She just coolly looked up and saw what she had in front of her" remembers Chambers.Leilani Mitchell consistently made big clutch plays. Here, she hits a game-winning jumper against Canberra. "She just coolly looked up and saw what she had in front of her" remembers Chambers.

Leilani Mitchell consistently made big clutch plays. Here, she hits a game-winning jumper against Canberra. “She just coolly looked up and saw what she had in front of her” remembers Chambers.

Ranking first in assists and second in steals, Mitchell was the ideal point guard: always thinking team-first, but more than capable creating her own shot or scoring herself. Perth coach Andy Stewart suggested Mitchell wouldn’t have been far off the league MVP. “She was a very, very difficult cover for us, not just with her scoring, but her ability to play-make and find the open shooter”.


Sarah Graham led the league in three-point percentage with 54%.Sarah Graham led the league in three-point percentage with 54%.

Sarah Graham led the league in three-point percentage with 54%.

          Those open shooters represented yet another strength for the Flames, who shot 38.90% from distance, the best of any team. Snell, Mitchell, Wilson all made more than 50 three-pointers at a good clip, while Tupaea and Nicholson were effective at lower volume. As if this wasn’t enough to torment teams, they could throw in Sarah Graham, who had the competition’s highest three-point percentage (54%).

On the defensive end, the Flames protected the rim ferociously and comfortably had the most blocked shots of any squad. Jen Hamson used every inch of her 6’9 wingspan to tally 63 blocks, first in the league. When Hamson was able to avoid foul trouble, she was a real handful, piling up rebounds as well as setting good picks and rolling hard to the rim. “One night (the players) came off and I said, ‘Wow, you’re defending well’” Chambers recalls. “Someone said ‘Yeah, that’s because Jen is out there changing every single shot’.


"Jen is out there changing every single shot". Jen Hamson was the competition's leading shot-blocker."Jen is out there changing every single shot". Jen Hamson was the competition's leading shot-blocker.

“Jen is out there changing every single shot”. Jen Hamson was the competition’s leading shot-blocker.

          Ally Wilson was one of the most improved players in the competition and came up huge in the post-season, rampaging towards 27 points against Townsville. Chambers had coached Wilson previously in junior teams and considered her “a great athlete” who was ready to contribute more at WNBL level. “In the pre-season I said to her ‘I think that there can be huge improvement in you’” Chambers says. The season saw Wilson expand her game significantly, increasingly showing an ability to break defenders down off the triple and cut to the rim for easy baskets. She also handled some huge defensive assignments with aplomb, restricting Perth phenom Sami Whitcomb to 4/17 shooting in an important home win.


Ally Wilson had her best WNBL season, showing new dimensions to her game.Ally Wilson had her best WNBL season, showing new dimensions to her game.

Ally Wilson had her best WNBL season, showing new dimensions to her game.

Lauren Nicholson was another strong addition, making some big threes late in the season and playing low turnover basketball. Despite the enviable depth that players like Nicholson gave them, the Flames were tested by injuries at times, with Snell, Taylor and Nicholson herself all missing games, while Tahlia Tupaea sat out half the regular season with a foot injury and Hayley Moffatt had the wretched luck of sustaining an ACL injury in the opening game.

          Tupaea contributed steadily at both ends after returning, giving Sydney a starting calibre guard off the bench and chipping in 18 points and 10 rebounds in the series-clinching victory over Townsville. Tupaea seems to have been around for a while, but at just 19 she is easily one of the top prospects in Australian basketball and on track to be a future Opal.

          Joining Tupaea in the youth department were Cassidy McLean and Lara McSpadden, who had both been members of Australia’s all-conquering under 17s team. Chambers says McLean has “unlimited potential” and the nimble guard impressed the team with her competitive nature. “At training, she certainly didn’t take a backwards step” Chambers says of McLean. “She always wanted to match up with Leilani”.


The Flames have some great young prospects alongside their experienced core. Here, Cassidy McLean assists on a Tahlia Tupaea basket.The Flames have some great young prospects alongside their experienced core. Here, Cassidy McLean assists on a Tahlia Tupaea basket.

The Flames have some great young prospects alongside their experienced core. Here, Cassidy McLean assists on a Tahlia Tupaea basket.

          The team’s other rookie, centre Lara McSpadden, projects as a good rebounder and shot-blocker and moves well for a big. Chambers likes her fundamentals (“She’s pretty tenacious, she can find the ball”) and was won over by her work ethic. “She’s really motivated, I never had to go and find her to do individuals, she was also into me first to do them”.

          So far, Wilson, Snell, Graeves and McSpadden are contracted for next year and Chambers is not underestimating the difficulty of keeping this stacked squad together, noting that as the Flames were playing in the semi-finals, other eliminated teams were already at work on identifying talent and planning for next year.

“There will be big budgets coming after our girls” she says. “But it was a wonderful year, and anyone who wants to come back, we’d absolutely love to have them”.

Asked whether the grand final win has sunk in yet, Chambers says “The enormity of it is probably still to come”. It may take a while to adjust to their new status as champions, but the Flames made a little bit of history this year. It’s a victory that will longer long; as Chambers told her players after the final siren sounded: “We’re bonded forever”

WNBL Semi-finals preview: Flames v Fire

Not for the first, second or third time in her career, the influence of Suzy Batkovic looms large over this semi-final series. The Townsville centre remains the WNBL’s leading inside presence and her ability to pick up cheap points, though Sydney have a capable big defender in Jen Hamson, one of the few players to have a height advantage over Batkovic. Still, the Flames will look to help on Batkovic as much as possible, with bench bigs Carly Boag and Shanae Graeves likely to be used in short spells to play physical defence and crash the offensive boards.

Teams have found it difficult not to give away fouls on Batkovic and Sydney will particularly want to keep the explosive Asia Taylor in the game as long as possible. Double teams on Batkovic will open up outside shots for Mia Murray (36% for the season) and Micaela Cocks (37%), who looms as something of an X-factor in the series, having exploded in last year’s finals series where she upped her productivity and was MVP. Expect Sydney to go under screens against point guard Natasha Cloud, and live with her shooting the three where she is only hitting on 21% from distance this season.

A huge reason why Sydney should be favoured in this matchup is their versatility; they can push Belinda Snell to small forward and may look to run Townsville around with three guard lineups including Tahlia Tupaea, whose form since returning from injury demands playing time. Leilani Mitchell is the clear #1 point guard in the league and has rounded into form at the right time of year, giving Sydney the edge in the backcourt.

Another intriguing player in the Sydney rotation is Sarah Graham. She hasn’t been required in some recent matches, but her long-range shooting (an eye-popping, league-leading 56% for the season) provides immensely valuable floor spacing and could net points in bunches if the Flames offence goes into a lull.

The defending champion Fire will not give up their title lightly and are a well-balanced squad, ranking third in both offence and defence. Overall, however, Sydney look to have too much depth and versatility over the course of the series. Further good news for Sydney is their irresistible form (8 wins in a rows) and they fact they were able to give their stars some rest as they coasted to a win over Adelaide in the last round.

Prediction: Sydney 2-1.

13 Things We Loved in the WNBL This Year

BATGIRL RETURNS

Two constants in the WNBL in recent years have been the ongoing success of the Townsville Fire and the machine-like production of Suzy Batkovic. One of only two players to score 20 points a game (21.3) and one of only a pair of players who averaged more than 10 rebounds (10.6), she was again utterly dominant in the paint, continuing to use her imposing size and unorthodox leftie game to devastating effect.

THE RIM PROTECTION OF MARIANNA TOLO

Of the league’s three elite shot blockers (With Jennifer Hamson and Ruth Hamblin), Tolo is the most mobile and an instinctive defender. Her return to the Capitals, along with her undiminished ability to swat shots and change countless others was a key reason last year’s last-placed Canberra squad improved by eleven wins and hovered on the edge of the finals this year.


One of 58 blocks Marianna Tolo collected.One of 58 blocks Marianna Tolo collected.

One of 58 blocks Marianna Tolo collected.

THE RISE (AND RISE) OF CARLEY MIJOVIC

Increased minutes don’t always lead to increased production, but Perth’s Carley Mijovic relished the chance to become the Lynx’s second scoring option behind Whitcomb and her stats climbed in almost every category. Agile, tall enough to play the five and a good enough shooter to be a floor-stretching matchup nightmare, Mijovic was Perth’s most improved player in the 2015/16 and if anything only hastened her improvement this season. She recorded 3 times as many blocks as last year, along with more than doubling her rebounds (7.5) and assists (1.29) per game and rocketed up the points per game chart, from 28th to 13th in the league.

THE FANTASTIC STEPH CUMMING

God damn, what a basketball player. While some pros carve out perfectly respectable careers by being excellent at one thing, Cumming’s particular niche is being good at everything: outside shooting, persistent perimeter defence, dishing out assists, scoring efficiently with her back to the basket, getting to the foul line. She passed 250 WNBL games this year and has never been better, nor played with such controlled fire.  “No-one ever wants to lose” she told a reporter recently, eyes grim with intensity. “You’re a liar if you say you like losing”.

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Steph Cumming: Not losingSteph Cumming: Not losing

Steph Cumming: Not losing

 

SAMI WHITCOMB, TORMENTOR OF DEFENCES

Initially arriving in the WNBL via the Western Australian Basketball League with little fanfare, the California-born Sami Whitcomb is now the league’s MVP frontrunner. Her late-blooming game includes superior ball-handling, herky-jerky drives to the basket and pure shooting from well beyond the three-point arc. It’s a multi-faceted puzzle nobody around the league has managed to solve on a consistent basis and her continued dominance has led to a well-deserved call-up to the WNBA. As Perth coach Andy Stewart recently told local press, it’s not a question of whether she is up to the sports premier competition, “My question would be – can she dominate it?”

 

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Sami Whitcomb shoots over a double team.Sami Whitcomb shoots over a double team.

Sami Whitcomb shoots over a double team.

THE MASCOTS


Look at them go!

CARLY WILSON GOES OUT A WINNER

A great outside shooter and scorer who also collected blocked shots at a rate normally reserved for towering centres, Wilson was an Opals mainstay in the early 2000s. She retired from the league this week with 363 WNBL career games, 1016 3-pointers, 3 WNBL championships, 2 all-star five selections, countless pairs of her trademark pink socks and a level of respect amongst fellow players and fans that would be impossible to quantify. The good news for the league is that she wants to stay involved in some capacity; a commentary gig in a new TV deal would be a win for all involved.

LEILANI MITCHELL, FLOOR GENERAL SUPREME

Leilani Mitchell is one of the smallest players in the WNBL, and also one of the best. Overcoming some uncharacteristic struggles with finishing earlier in the season, she was dynamic in the Flames’ 8-game winning streak, particularly down the stretch of close games where her calmness running the point, uncanny ability to get to the rim and redoubtable pull-up jumper were invaluable and loom as major assets come Finals time.

MADDIE GARRICK, FUTURE OPALS STAR

Melbourne’s unwanted penchant for losing close games condemned them to an early exit from the playoff race, but the continued growth of Maddie Garrick was a bright spot. With a tight handle and an arsenal of feints, fakes, jab steps and hesitations polished enough to get separation from even the most dogged of defenders, she seems headed for Opals selection.

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DOING IT FOR THE KIDS

Broadcasters continued to shun the league, but that didn’t stop the younger generation turning out in force. 

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Kelly Wilson with some young fans.Kelly Wilson with some young fans.

Kelly Wilson with some young fans.

 

KICKING IT OLD SCHOOL

NBA fans have bemoaned the decreased importance of post-up players as D’Antoni ball has taken over the league, all but wiping out the old style of bigs with low-post repetoires. Pace and space basketball is spectacular and efficient, but there is still a place for the old skills and in the WNBL, the back to the basket game is alive and well with players like Suzy Batkovic and Bendigo’s Nayo Raincock-Ekunwe being post-up juggernauts.

SARA BLICAVS, BIG TIME SMALL FORWARD

Whether flying around screens, acting as an ambassador for charities or churning out comedy gold on Twitter, Sara Blicavs was a star in season 2016/17. A genuine two-way force and one of only two players to average at least 16 points, 7 rebounds, 2 assists and a steal (the other was Asia Taylor), her athletic ability and well-rounded game were a major reason why Dandenong secured a home semi-final in a congested ladder. 

THE ATHLETICISM OF ASIA TAYLOR

Experienced WNBL journalists were projecting Sydney to miss the finals; the eye-catching play of the Louisville alum was one major reason they exceeded expectations. She was a difficult cover for any type of defender: too physically strong for fleet-footed wings and possessing a first step too quick for lumbering bigs. Explosive enough to swipe rebounds and run the floor, her top 10 scoring and rebounding numbers saw her named in the team of the week 8 times, equaling Suzy Batkovic and behind only Sami Whitcomb (13). 

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Asia Taylor goes coast to coast.Asia Taylor goes coast to coast.

Asia Taylor goes coast to coast.