Melbourne too good for Illawarra in NBL

Melbourne United have posted a 95-83 win over the Illawarra Hawks on the back of a dominant shooting performance by Todd Blanchfield.

Melbourne forward Todd Blanchfield drained eight three-pointers as United claimed a 95-83 NBL win over the Illawarra Hawks in Melbourne on Sunday.

Blanchfield made all but one of his shots from beyond the arc, finishing with 27 points and six rebounds, as United overcame a slow start to take their record to 2-2.

Illawarra's defensive pressure stood out in the early going, big men Andrew Ogilvy and Michael Holyfield dominating the glass and providing the Hawks' shooters with open shots.

Import guard Marvelle Harris showed the Hawks' defensive intent with a game-high five steals to go along with 20 points, while Ogilvy was impressive at both ends of the floor.

But once Melbourne's offence began to gel, led by Boomers shooting guard Chris Goulding (19 points, seven assists), there was little the Hawks could do to stop them.

United led by a solitary point at halftime but piled on 29 points in a dominant third term.

Much of that was down to Blanchfield, who worked hard to find space and seemingly couldn't miss from deep.

Melbourne's defensive efforts were much improved in the second half too, personified by Cedric Jackson sprinting the floor to block a Harris layup in one of the plays of the game halfway through the final term.

Tai Wesley chipped in 10 points off the bench, while 206cm power forward Majok Majok (nine points, 11 rebounds) impressed with his work on the low post.

Melbourne host the Brisbane Bullets on Thursday, while the 1-2 Hawks will travel to Perth to face the reigning champion Wildcats on Friday.

Hawks coach Rob Beveridge said his side shot poorly from beyond the arc and gave up too many open looks to Melbourne, who did a far better job of capitalising.

"It's pretty disappointing that they were able to do that," he said.

"That was the difference, purely. They shoot 70 per cent, we shoot 24 - there's the game right there. We lose by 12 and it could have been a lot worse."

Melbourne coach Dean Demopoulos said it was a much-improved performance from the highly-fancied United but cautioned that the team remained a work in progress.

"We weren't quite as bad as people thought the first couple of games and we're not quite as good as some people might think now," he said.

"We're not drowning anymore, we're sea level - for now, anyway - and we just want to build on it."


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Source: AAP


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