Kings belt Wildcats in final home NBL game

In their final home game of the NBL season, the Sydney Kings have beaten the high-flying Perth Wildcats 103-77 in a major upset.

The Kings have celebrated a win against high-flying Perth 103-77 in their final home game of the NBL season at Sydney Olympic Park.

The Wildcats had the minor premiership up for grabs, a sought-after position given the home-ground advantage throughout the finals, but Wednesday night's loss denies them top spot and they will likely finish second on the ladder.

With skipper Damien Martin (ankle sprain), Nathan Jawai and Jermaine Beal (both back tightness), omitted from the Perth line-up, coach Trevor Gleeson appeared to underestimate a Kings side looking to capitalise on weakened opposition and grab the chance to end a dismal last-placed season on a winning high.

The Kings were happy to take the advantage and show plenty of determination.

The Wildcats opened the night's scoring and it looked like another long evening ahead for the cellar-dwellers.

However, Sydney began to play with notable aggression in attack and looked like a team wanting to win, offering the kind of team cohesion they desperately needed last October at the start of the season.

Ahead at the first break, 27-23, the Kings went from strength to strength in the second quarter. They broke to a 17-point advantage at one stage and were ahead 59-46 at the main break.

Guard Josh Childress and captain Tom Garlepp led the way with 15 points each ahead of the second half.

Childress powered on in the third quarter, instrumental in the Kings' well-oiled new look and finishing the game top scoring with 25 points and he also managed four assists.

Garlepp also impressed with 22 points with Marcus Thorton clocking 16 for the home side who cruised to a 26-point victory in their last game of the season at home. Finally, the fans had something to cheer about.

Perth will take on the 36ers in Adelaide on Sunday night, with the home side fighting to lock up third spot on the ladder.

Perth coach Gleason said he didn't think the Wildcats were even in the game.

"They got their tails up. When you give a team 59 points at halftime, that's not Wildcats basketball - that's an end score.

"We just weren't there and, as soon as we tried to change things up, we didn't have the depth and congratulations to Sydney.

"They played at a good stent the whole game. If they had of played that standard all the way through, they wouldn't be sitting on the bottom of the table," Gleeson said of the Kings' performance.

Stand-out Kings player Childress was elated with the win, a result he had planned for.

"We wanted to come in with a winning mentality, win by any means, no matter what, and we came out and did that.

"We rebounded well, we got to the free-throw line pretty well and we got our transition. We got easy baskets and kept our foot on the pedal - didn't allow them to get too close." Childress said.

"I think it was a great team win and I'm happy for that ... I just wanted to come out for a win and finish on a strong note these last two games," he added.


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Source: AAP



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