Pulse grab trophy and top spot on the table
Te Wānanga o Raukawa Pulse will return from Invercargill with the new Robyn Broughton Legacy Trophy while also perched at the top of the table after a convincing 65-38 win over the Steel on Monday night.
The Pulse leapt over the Tactix to claim the No 1 spot at the end of Round 12, but they weren’t always dominant in the match with the bottom-placed Steel. There was little between the two sides in a low-scoring first quarter, when the Pulse fell into a Steel trap of trying to force the ball into their shooters.
Although it was dogged Pulse wing defence Fa’amu Ioane’s 100th national league match, it was her captain Kelly Jackson who stole the limelight. After a successful night hunting, she ended up with 15 gains, including six intercepts.
``I think defensively Steel started really well and they made the space look open and we were guilty of giving the ball when it wasn’t actually on, so I’m glad we tidied that up,’’ Pulse co-captain Jackson said.
``It probably wasn’t as clinical as we had hoped but great to be able to put those numbers on the scoreboard.
``Fa’amu is a real workhouse out there. Lots of people under-estimate her but if you’re an up-and-coming wing defence, just watch her because she just does all the ground work and creates all the ball at the back for us. And it’s great we’re able to celebrate her today.’’
At the start of the match, errors working the ball into their circle were ironed out quickly by the Steel, and Taneisha Fifita, coming back from an injury break, got her hands to lobbed ball destined for Pulse goal shoot Martina Salmon early in the quarter – helping the home side grab a two-goal lead.
But Jackson got into her groove, picking up two intercepts, three deflections and seven gains, to put the Pulse ahead – albeit only by one, 11-10, at the first break.
Both sides continued to be guilty of poor connections on attack, and inaccurate shooting once they got near the hoop, allowing the defenders to have a field day.
The Pulse brought goal attack Tiana Metuarau into their shooting circle at the same time the Steel turned to Summer Temu at goal shoot.
The move initially benefitted the Pulse as they eased out to a double-figure advantage (where the Steel had only scored one goal in eight minutes).
Although Temu and Georgia Heffernan started to click in the Steel circle, well fed by the bullet-style passing of new signing Charlotte Lourey, the Pulse went into the halftime break 25-17 ahead.
While the combination of Claire Kersten and Whitney Souness controlled the Pulse attack, the duo of Parris Mason and Jackson were again dominant in defence. Mason left the court to have an ankle injury strapped after a mid-quarter trip, but was back causing havoc for the Steel shooters in a flash.
The Pulse grew in confidence as the Steel struggled and won the quarter 19-10.
Down 44-27, the Steel had moments of clarity in the final quarter, with Heffernan putting away some clean long shots but were no match for a dominant Pulse side who got better the longer the match went on while recording the biggest margin of the season.
Salmon, who copped an accidental elbow to the nose, improved with accuracy as the game went on to finish with 53 from 62 (85 percent). It was her third game this season of scoring 50-plus goals, the only player across the league to achieve the feat.
Shooting stats
Steel:
Grace Namana 11/16 (69%)
Georgia Heffernan 20/24 (83%)
Summer Temu 7/7 (100%)
Pulse:
Martina Salmon 53/62 (85%)
Kiana Pelasio 3/5 (60%)
Tiana Metuarau 9/12 (75%)
ANZ Fans' Player of the Match: Claire Kersten (Pulse)