BA lauds Phillips' AFLW success - for now

Basketball Australia is comfortable with elite players playing in the AFLW as long as the season can fit in between their basketball schedules.

Erin Phillips of the Crows

Adelaide Crows AFLW star Erin Phillips is set to return to basketball in the WNBA. (AAP)

Australian basketball has welcomed back Erin Phillips, confident the Opal's AFLW success won't prompt a talent drain to the football code as the league considers expansion.

Phillips will return to basketball in the WNBA in coming weeks after dominating the inaugural AFLW season, winning a premiership, AFLPA MVP award and league best and fairest title.

Outgoing Opals coach Brendan Joyce, unsurprised by her feats in football, sees a future for the Adelaide Crows midfielder in the national basketball team, including a third Olympics in Tokyo 2020.

"As far the Opals are concerned, I have no doubt she can play on," Joyce told AAP.

"She's a total professional and physically takes care of herself and she's got the skills package. She's got runs on the board."

Phillips, 31, switching between sports is no concern for Joyce or Basketball Australia (BA), which welcomes additional choice for female athletes.

Even if other basketballers decide to follow her path, BA encourages players attempting both sports - so long as the AFLW's eight-week season can fit in between top-tier basketball schedules in the US and Europe.

Plans by the AFL to extend the women's competition, however, through more home-and-away rounds and a finals series could throw a spanner into the works.

"They played a seven-week season. Did it impact Erin going to the WNBA? No," BA national teams manager Jan Stirling told AAP.

"So I don't really see too many concerns with it at all. Any elite athlete, if they want to go onto the world stage, there's a certain period where they have to define which is the sport of their choice.

"But at the moment, she's been able to accommodate both and I just think that's sensational for her and great for both codes.

"If we're talking 10 years down the track and an AFL women's season goes for five months, then there may be some decisions to be made then. But it's all hypothetical."

The domestic WNBL's lack of exposure, failing to get a broadcast deal while the AFLW found an audience through television coverage, could be another issue for basketball.

But Stirling said basketball holds a trump card over the AFL.

"Players who want to go to an Olympic Games or a world championships or play in another country and experience that, the AFL's not going to have that for them," she said.

Basketball talent has long been of interest to AFL recruiters, but Joyce believes the two sports can thrive with the women's talent pool available.

"The way the AFLW is set up, it looks like the girls will be able to play both. That's unique," Joyce said.

"At the end of the day, the kids have got to do what they love.

"I know Erin is over the moon about this. Women haven't been able to play AFL footy so it's fantastic to have choice."


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Source: AAP



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