The Taranaki Airs are a New Zealand professional basketball team based in New Plymouth. The Airs compete in the National Basketball League (NBL) and play their home games at TSB Stadium. For sponsorship reasons, they are known as the Steelformers Airs.
Taranaki Airs | ||
---|---|---|
League | NZNBL | |
Founded | 1981 | |
History | New Plymouth Bulls 1985–1991 New Plymouth Bears 1992–1993 Taranaki Bears 1994–1997 Taranaki Oilers 1998–1999 Taranaki Mountainairs 2003–2007 Taranaki Dynamos 2008–2009 Taranaki Mountainairs 2010–2021 Taranaki Airs 2022–present | |
Arena | TSB Stadium | |
Location | New Plymouth, Taranaki, New Zealand | |
Team colours | Yellow & black | |
Main sponsor | Steelformers | |
Chairman | Laine Hopkinson | |
General manager | Cole Brown | |
Head coach | Sam Mackinnon | |
Ownership | Media8 Sports | |
Championships | 0 | |
Website | taranakiairs.basketball | |
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Team history
A New Plymouth team played in the inaugural season of the Conference Basketball League (CBL) in 1981 and earned runners-up honours. The team went on to finish as runners-up in the CBL Northern Conference in 1983, before winning the CBL championship in 1984.[1]
The team was promoted to the National Basketball League (NBL) for the 1985 season.[2] The team was originally known as the Bulls.[3] The team became known as the New Plymouth Bears in 1992,[4] the same year they were crowned regular season winners for the first time.[2] The team was rebranded as Taranaki in 1994 and then became the Oilers in 1998.[4] Following the 1999 season, the franchise withdrew from the NBL.[5][6]
In 2001, a Taranaki team known as the Stormers were the winners of the CBL Central Conference.[7] The following year, the Stormers were once again winners of the CBL Central Conference,[8] earning an 18–0 season record before going on to win the CBL championship with an 85–81 victory over the Kaikoura Whale Riders in the final led by point guard Willie Banks and import forward Link Abrams.[9][10]
In 2003, Taranaki returned to the NBL as the Mountainairs.[11][12] In 2009 and 2015, the team had winless seasons. In 2016, they won eight games for the first time since 2008.[13] The Mountainairs subsequently won just 10 of 54 games between 2017 and 2019.[14]
In September 2019, it was revealed that the team had significant debt that could cause them to withdraw from the 2020 NBL season.[15][16] The following month, naming rights partner Steelformers stepped in to save the team from collapse.[17]
In December 2021, the team name was changed from Mountainairs to Airs.[18] In 2022, the Airs finished on top of the regular-season standings with a 12–6 record to be crowned minor premiers for just the second time in franchise history and first since 1992.[19][20][21]
In September 2023, the team was acquired by Media8 Sports, an Australian sports media company.[22][23]
Current roster
Note: Flags indicate national team eligibility at FIBA-sanctioned events. Players may hold other non-FIBA nationalities not displayed.
References
External links
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