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Encyclopedia > Canberra Cannons

The Canberra Cannons were a basketball team competing in the Australian National Basketball League. They went into financial administration in 2003 and were relocated to Newcastle, where they now compete as the Hunter Pirates.


History

The Cannons were one of the original ten NBL clubs, competing in the league's very first season in 1979. They reached the championship game with a 13_5 record, but fell at the final hurdle, losing to the St Kilda Saints 94_93 in the final.


Canberra failed to make the playoffs over the next few seasons, but in 1983 they won their first NBL championship, downing the West Adelaide Bearcats 75-73 in the Grand Final. Guard Phil Smyth led the NBL in steals and assists.


The Cannons repeated as champions in 1984, this time beating the Brisbane Bullets 84-82 in the big game. Smyth again had a big season, being named to the All-NBL First Team.


Canberra made the playoffs for the next three seasons but championship glory eluded them until 1988, when they beat the North Melbourne Giants 2_1 in a best_of_three championship series. Smyth again was named to the All_NBL First Team after leading the league in three_point percentage, free_throw percentage and steals, and was also named Best Defensive Player. North Melbourne exacted their revenge in 1989, beating the Cannons 2-0 in the championship series.


The Cannons failed to make the playoffs again until 1992, when they were eliminated in the first round by the eventual champions, the South-East Melbourne Magic. They reached the playoffs in 1996 and 1997 but failed to make any impact.


Financial problems dogged the club in the late 1990s, and the team finally succumbed to its money woes in December of 2002. The club managed to play all its remaining games from the 2002/03 NBL season, but were unable to hold on to their star players, including C.J. Bruton, the son of then-coach Cal Bruton. Canberra finished with an 11-19 record, and the team was bought by a consortium that moved the team to Newcastle.


Honour Roll

Championships: 3 (1983, 1984, 1988)


NBL Most Valuable Player award: No winners. Herb McEachin (1980), Dave Nelson (1981) and Robert Rose (1996) were runners-up in the vote.


Coach Of The Year award: Bob Turner (1985), Brett Flanigan (1996)


Rookie Of The Year award: Jamie Kennedy (1983), Lachlan Armfield (1992), Damian Ryan (1999)


Best Defensive Player award: Phil Smyth (1988, 1989)


All-NBL First Team players: Herb McEachin (1980) Dave Nelson (1981) Robert Rose (1996, 1997) Phil Smyth (1983, 1984, 1985, 1988, 1989) Cal Stamp (1980)


  Results from FactBites:
 
Hunter Pirates - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (342 words)
The Hunter Pirates were an Australian basketball team, based in the city of Newcastle, that competed in the National Basketball League.
The team was once known as the Canberra Cannons, one of the foundation members of the NBL (the others were the Newcastle Falcons, Illawarra (Wollongong) Hawks and Brisbane Bullets).
At the end of the 2002/03 season, new owners moved the team to Newcastle, and renamed the franchise the Hunter Pirates, keeping with the maritime battlers theme.
Newcastle may back Canberra Cannons - theage.com.au (553 words)
Coach-turned-chief-executive Cal Bruton has unearthed potential investors in the Canberra Cannons from Newcastle, another city that found it could not afford a National Basketball League team.
Ali said tonight's Canberra game between the Cannons and Sydney Kings would be important in determining whether the Cannons, who remain in administration, made it through the season.
Canberra will be without injured captain C.J. Bruton again tonight and perhaps for the season.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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