In a country where rugby is a national obsession, basketball has
always struggled to find a place in the sun. All this is about to change
according to former player John Saker.
Saker says the success of New Zealand’s NBA wunderkind Steven
Adams, the signing of Tai Winyard to the University of Kentucky, the ongoing
heroics of the Breakers in the Australian National Basketball League, and a
Tall Blacks side that never fails to punch above its weight are all
contributing to a surge in momentum.
“There’s a gifted generation of players coming through, many of
whom have tasted, or are tasting, success in the States. And it’s only going to
get better. Adams’ amazing career has both raised the profile of New Zealand
basketball over there and inspired other young New Zealanders to take up the
sport and aim high.
“Our national team is already a national treasure – to be ranked
21st in the world in one of the very few global sports is a fantastic
achievement. And I can only see that ranking improving over the next few
years.”
Saker
became New Zealand’s first pro basketball player when he took up a contract in
France in the 1970s. Before that he was one of the first Kiwis to attend a US
university on a basketball scholarship. On March 14 his book Open Looks: My
Life in Basketball (Awa Press, $28) hits bookstores. It covers his sporting
life, from shooting hoops as a troubled teenager to his debut for the Tall
Blacks, playing in the US and France, and attending a rather strange reunion of
old teammates in Montana. He ends the book with a terrific story of playing
street basketball in his fifties at Los Angeles’ famed Venice Beach.
Saker is a wine writer for Cuisine
and The Sunday Star-Times, author of How to Drink a Glass of Wine,
Pinot Noir: The New Zealand Story and Vinacular: A Wine Lover’s A–Z,
and an award-winning travel writer.
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