The Sydney Kings have taken advantage of Chris Goulding's absence to defeat Melbourne United, 101-80, in the NBL's historic Christmas Day clash.
He was trying to go back in the game. He said he'd had enough rest," Buford said. "We spoke about that as a group. Hopefully, it played well on television. "It was a privilege to be a part of," he said. "We knew it was maybe a bit experimental to have a game on Christmas, but the turnout with the fans exceeded expectations.
NBA on Christmas Day has been a successful annual tradition since 1947, but in the Australian sports landscape, the sentiment was nonexistent.
And I think the NBL has to continue to try to do things like that." "If you look at the NBA, they reward the best teams in the competition and the drawcords of the league. "As soon as you've got NRL and AFL people saying it's a horrible idea for the NBL, then I think you're starting to get somewhere. It was a sacrifice for us obviously, but it's something we've done multiple times as United: to try different things and try to see the league grow. If an Australian had a desire to watch sport as Christmas Day came to a close, there was only one place to turn. If you're one of the best teams in the league, and we say this is something we wanna do, then the best team should have an opportunity to showcase themselves." With the loss, Dean Vickerman's team dropped to 9-12 on the season but, while Sunday's result put yet another dent in their dwindling playoff hopes, there was still a level of appreciation for the occasion. You'd much rather play and get the whole day, or if it's a game day, you get the whole afternoon. A slate of high-profile games on Christmas Day is commonplace in the NBA; it began in 1947 and has been a successful annual tradition ever since. The Kings' goal internally was an attendance of 10,000 but they were still extremely encouraged by the 7012-strong crowd at Qudos Bank Arena, who were treated with what was, for the most part, a quality game of basketball. "I do some work with the Kings," Smith said to them; an understatement, if ever there was one. Despite the lack of flow that can come with diminished spacing, United managed to stay within striking distance, trailing just 46-40 at the half, and even tying the game at 52 apiece midway through the third quarter.
More than 7000 fans turned out to watch the Sydney Kings beat Melbourne United in the first professional sporting fixture played on December 25 in ...
“It was a privilege to be a part of,” he said. “I think it was just a cramp. He said he’d had enough rest,” Buford said. “It sounds like we [the NBL] will probably be back at it again next year.” We had our American players talk about how they grow up wanting to play on Christmas Day. “With Barlow out with a concussion and CG out sick, there was some composure and some shooting that we were missing a little bit tonight.”
The Sydney Kings have taken advantage of Chris Goulding's absence to defeat Melbourne United 101-80 in the NBL's historic Christmas Day clash.
He was trying to go back in the game. He said he'd had enough rest," Buford said. "It's the big day to play (in the NBA), other than the play-offs." "With Barlow out with a concussion and CG out sick, there was some composure and some shooting that we were missing a little bit tonight." "It was a privilege to be a part of," he said. "It sounds like we (the NBL) will probably be back at it again next year."
Credit: Dan Bennett Photography. The Sydney Kings' 101-80 victory over Melbourne United yesterday, brought the arrival of Christmas Day sport into Australia ...
Offer the product (sport on Christmas) and allow those with an interest to consume it, and do so without the fear of offending a small minority who will avoid it for their own ideological reasons. Because Christmas Day is one of the best days of the year to watch sport. The A League will follow, as will every commercially sound operation that sees dollars to be made. Thanks to the NBL, the change is now coming. The matchup will likely open the floodgates for Christmas Day sport in Australia. The law, a concept popularised in literature circles by Everett Rogers and then for a digital generation by
The Sydney Kings experimental foray into a Christmas Day game has been hailed as a success, with plans to ...
It gives us a profile we don't normally have, and puts us in the conversation. once again the magic of sport, the magic of events, it all comes together." "My normal Christmas Day I'd probably see about six people all day. "It puts the NBL, and puts the Kings up on a platform. READ MORE: