Jump to content

1989 NBL Finals

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Alextigers (talk | contribs) at 06:19, 10 July 2020 (Grand Final series: Source: https://websites.sportstg.com/comp_info.cgi?a=LADDER&c=0-189-0-125711-0&pool=-1&round=22). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

1989 NBL Finals
LeagueNational Basketball League
SportBasketball
Duration20 September - 20 October 1989
Number of teams6
TV partner(s)Seven Network
NBL Finals
ChampionsNorth Melbourne Giants
  Runners-upCanberra Cannons
Finals MVPScott Fisher
Seasons
← 1988
1990 →

The 1989 NBL Finals was the championship series of the 1989 season of Australia's National Basketball League (NBL) and the conclusion of the season's playoffs. The North Melbourne Giants defeated the Canberra Cannons in two games (2-0) for their first NBL championship.

Format

The 1989 National Basketball League Finals started on 20 September and concluded on 20 October. The playoffs consisted of two best of three Elimination finals, two best of three Semi-finals and the best of three game Grand Final series. As the two top teams at the end of the regular season, the North Melbourne Giants and Canberra Cannons both qualified for home court advantage during the Semi-finals.

Qualification

Qualified teams

Team Finals
appearance
Previous
appearance
Previous best
performance
North Melbourne Giants 2nd 1988 Runner up in 1988
Canberra Cannons 8th 1988 Champions (1983, 1984, 1988)
Perth Wildcats 2nd 1988 Runner up (1987)
Melbourne Tigers 1st - 9th in 1984
Sydney Kings 1st - 9th in 1988
Adelaide 36ers 6th 1988 Champions (1986)

Ladder

Pos 1989 NBL season
Team Pld W L PCT Last 5 Streak Home Away PF PA PP
1 Canberra Cannons 24 18 6 75.00% 4–1 W4 10–2 8–4 2736 2580 106.05%
2 North Melbourne Giants 24 17 7 70.33% 5–0 W7 11–1 6–6 2993 2701 110.81%
3 Perth Wildcats1 24 16 8 66.67% 3–2 W2 11–1 5–7 2681 2660 100.79%
4 Melbourne Tigers1 24 16 8 66.67% 3–2 L2 8–4 8–4 2802 2660 105.34%
5 Sydney Kings2 24 15 9 62.50% 2–3 L2 9–3 6–6 2471 2489 99.28%
6 Adelaide 36ers2 24 15 9 62.50% 3–2 W2 10–2 5–7 2778 2668 104.12%
7 Eastside Spectres 24 14 10 53.85% 4–1 W4 9–3 5–7 2527 2454 102.97%
8 Brisbane Bullets 24 11 13 45.83% 1–4 W1 7–5 4–8 2563 2492 102.85%
9 Westside Saints3 24 8 16 33.33% 3–2 W1 5–7 3–9 2522 2648 95.24%
10 Hobart Tassie Devils3 24 8 16 33.33% 3–2 W1 6–6 2–10 2566 2757 93.07%
11 Illawarra Hawks 24 7 17 29.17% 0–5 L6 5–7 2–10 2826 2929 96.48%
12 Newcastle Falcons 24 6 18 25.00% 2–3 L2 5–7 1–11 2649 2799 94.64%
13 Geelong Supercats 24 5 19 20.83% 0–5 L6 3–9 2–10 2445 2722 89.82%

Updated to match(es) played on 16 September 1989. Source: NBL.com.au

Elimination finals

(3) Perth Wildcats vs (6) Adelaide 36ers

Game 1

20 September
Adelaide 36ers 124, Perth Wildcats 122
Scoring by quarter: 33-31, 27-37, 33-35, 31-19
Pts: Pearce, Davis 25 each
Rebs: Mark Davis 13
Asts: Mark Bradtke 5
Pts: Cal Bruton 35
Rebs: Crawford, Pinder 9 each
Asts: Mike Ellis 11
Adelaide lead the series 1-0
Apollo Stadium, Adelaide
Attendance: 3,000
Referees: Eddie Crouch, Bill Mildenhall

Game 2

22 September
Perth Wildcats 114, Adelaide 36ers 94
Scoring by quarter: 27-31, 32-23, 28-18, 27-22
Pts: Kendal Pinder 25
Rebs: Kendal Pinder 14
Asts: Eric Watterson 7
Pts: Mark Davis 22
Rebs: Mark Davis 20
Asts: Green, Pearce 3 each
Series tied at 1-1
Perth Superdrome
Attendance: 4,500
Referees: Eddie Crouch, Ray Hunt

Game 3

24 September
Perth Wildcats 112, Adelaide 36ers 108
Scoring by quarter: 29-35, 34-26, 28-23, 21-24
Pts: Cal Bruton 29
Rebs: Kendal Pinder 14
Asts: Mike Ellis 8
Pts: Mark Davis 34
Rebs: Orlando Phillips 13
Asts: Darryl Pearce 5
Perth win the series 2-1
Perth Superdrome
Attendance: 4,500
Referees: Ray Hunt, Eddie Crouch

(4) Melbourne Tigers vs (5) Sydney Kings

Game 1

20 September
Sydney Kings 117, Melbourne Tigers 105
Scoring by quarter: 25-23, 30-29, 29-31, 33-22
Pts: Ian Davies 30
Rebs: Mark Ridlen 9
Asts: Steve Carfino 8
Pts: Andrew Gaze 38
Rebs: Gaze, Colbert 8 each
Asts: Andrew Gaze
Sydney lead the series 1-0
State Sports Centre, Sydney
Attendance: 5,006
Referees: Ray Hunt, Roger Shiels

Game 2

22 September
Melbourne Tigers 112, Sydney Kings 89
Scoring by quarter: 32-26, 35-29, 24-19, 21-15
Pts: Dave Simmons 33
Rebs: Dave Simmons 15
Asts: Gaze, Giddey 5 each
Pts: Mark Ridlen 25
Rebs: Brad Dalton 12
Asts: Carfino, Keogh 4 each
Series tied at 1-1
The Glass House, Melbourne
Attendance: 7,200
Referees: Geoff Weeks, Bill Mildenhall

Game 3

24 September
Melbourne Tigers 83, Sydney Kings 85
Scoring by quarter: 20-30, 29-21, 16-19, 18-15
Pts: Andrew Gaze 30
Rebs: Warrick Giddey 15
Asts: Ray Gordon 4
Pts: Mark Ridlen 28
Rebs: Mark Ridlen 18
Asts: Mark Ridlen 4
Sydney wins the series 2-1
The Glass House, Melbourne
Attendance: 7,200
Referees: Geoff Weeks, Bill Mildenhall

Semi-finals

(1) Canberra Cannons vs (5) Sydney Kings

Game 1

29 September
Sydney Kings 98, Canberra Cannons 108
Scoring by quarter: 23-33, 30-30, 25-19, 20-26
Pts: Tim Morrissey 20
Rebs: Morrissey, Ridlen 14 each
Asts: Ian Robilliard 6
Pts: Emery Atkinson 22
Rebs: Emery Atkinson 13
Asts: Emery Atkinson 7
Canberra lead the series 1-0
State Sports Centre, Sydney
Attendance: 5,006
Referees: Ray Hunt, Paul Beale

Game 2

6 October
Canberra Cannons 92, Sydney Kings 100
Scoring by quarter: 18-32, 23-17, 18-25, 33-26
Pts: Emery Atkinson 30
Rebs: Willie Simmons 12
Asts: Emery Atkinson 5
Pts: Mark Ridlen 29
Rebs: Mark Ridlen 19
Asts: Steve Carfino 5
Series tied at 1-1
AIS Arena, Canberra
Attendance: 5,200
Referees: Eddie Crouch, Bill Mildenhall

Game 3

8 October
Canberra Cannons 142, Sydney Kings 82
Scoring by quarter: 33-14, 45-20, 31-17, 33-31
Pts: Simon Cottrell 34
Rebs: Emery Atkinson 15
Asts: Phil Smyth 10
Pts: Tim Morrissey 26
Rebs: Brad Dalton 12
Asts: Keogh, Robilliard 4 each
Canberra wins the series 2-1
AIS Arena, Canberra
Attendance: 5,200
Referees: Eddie Crouch, Bill Mildenhall

(2) North Melbourne Giants vs (3) Perth Wildcats

Game 1

30 September
Perth Wildcats 108, North Melbourne Giants 129
Scoring by quarter: 26-35, 30-23, 18-37, 34-34
Pts: Cal Bruton 34
Rebs: Kendal Pinder 15
Asts: Eric Watterson 8
Pts: Scott Fisher 27
Rebs: Scott Fisher 13
Asts: Mark Leader 6
North Melbourne lead the series 1-0
Perth Superdrome
Attendance: 4,500
Referees: Eddie Crouch, Geoff Weeks

Game 2

6 October
North Melbourne Giants 108, Perth Wildcats 111
Scoring by quarter: 39-23, 22-29, 28-34, 19-25
Pts: Ray Borner 24
Rebs: Tim Dillon 14
Asts: Mark Leader 5
Pts: James Crawford 42
Rebs: Kendal Pinder 21
Asts: Cal Bruton 13
Series tied at 1-1
The Glass House, Melbourne
Attendance: 7,200
Referees: Ray Hunt, Geoff Weeks

Game 3

8 October
North Melbourne Giants 165, Perth Wildcats 110
Scoring by quarter: 37-29, 34-21, 47-24, 47-36
Pts: Scott Fisher 32
Rebs: Scott Fisher 14
Asts: Graham, Leader 5 each
Pts: Mike Ellis 18
Rebs: Steve Davis 11
Asts: Davis, Ellis, Bruton, Watterson 2 each
North Melbourne win the series 2-1
The Glass House, Melbourne
Attendance: 7,200
Referees: Ray Hunt, Geoff Weeks

North Melbourne's 55 point win over Perth in game 3 of their Semi-final series was the record winning margin for an NBL Semi-final breaking the previous record of 48 held by Adelaide for their 151–103 win over Newcastle in 1985. The Giants score of 165 also remains (as of the 2016 NBL Finals) the highest score in an NBL Finals game.

Grand Final series

(1) Canberra Cannons vs (2) North Melbourne Giants

Game 1

14 October
Canberra Cannons 105, North Melbourne Giants 111
Scoring by quarter: 22-24, 33-24, 24-27, 26-36
Pts: Phil Smyth 23
Rebs: Emery Atkinson 11
Asts: Dufelmeier, Atkinson 5 each
Pts: Scott Fisher 37
Rebs: Tim Dillon 11
Asts: Carroll, Leader 4 each
North Melbourne leads series 1-0
AIS Arena, Canberra
Attendance: 5,200
Referees: Bill Mildenhall, Eddie Crouch

Game 2

20 October
North Melbourne Giants 111, Canberra Cannons 97
Scoring by quarter: 25-36, 31-20, 21-20, 34-21
Pts: Scott Fisher 33
Rebs: Tim Dillon 15
Asts: David Graham 5
Pts: Simmons, Mceachin 20 each
Rebs: Willie Simmons 14
Asts: Emery Atkinson 3
North Melbourne wins series and NBL Championship, 2–0
Grand Final MVP: Scott Fisher (North Melbourne)
The Glass House, Melbourne
Attendance: 7,200
Referees: Eddie Crouch, Bill Mildenhall

See also

References