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AAP
Steve Barrett

Wildcats too good for depleted SEM Phoenix in NBL

Keanu Pinder has led all Perth scorers in their 103-91 NBL road win over the Phoenix in Melbourne. (Joel Carrett/AAP PHOTOS)

Perth have all but locked away second position on the NBL ladder after riding a fast start to a 103-91 win over South East Melbourne.

Shocked at home by Illawarra two days ago, the Wildcats set up their bounceback victory by outscoring the Phoenix 29-17 in the opening quarter at Melbourne's State Basketball Centre on Saturday night.

Keanu Pinder (23 points, 11 rebounds) and Bryce Cotton (21 points, eight assists) were prominent for Perth, while French teen sensation Alex Sarr (18 points, five blocks), touted as the No.1 pick in the 2024 NBA draft, was a menace at both ends in the paint.

"We came out with good purpose and energy," Wildcats coach John Rillie said.

"We had multiple contributors at a high level."

After stunning Sydney on Thursday, the Phoenix - with Gary Browne (groin), Alan Williams (knee), Matt Kenyon (hip) and Craig Moller (knee) sidelined - battled bravely to the finish line, piloted by captain Mitch Creek (29 points) and Ben Ayre (23), but were left to rue a sorry start.

The home side were wayward early, missing 18 of their first 25 shots, while allowing Perth to score at will and hit 14 of their first 19 attempts.

A scoring spree either side of quarter time allowed the Wildcats to turn a 22-17 lead into a 34-17 one with 216cm Sarr influential.

The towering 18-year-old rejected Kody Stattmann's dunk attempt then threw down a vicious dunk on the same player as Perth's lead blew out to 53-34 before the Phoenix, behind the inspirational lone hand of Creek (18 first-half points), trimmed the margin to 59-46 at the main interval.

Sarr continued to wreak havoc inside but Ayre and Owen Foxwell combined to harass Cotton defensively and give Creek some belated support on offence.

The Phoenix closed the gap to single digits in the fourth but time was their enemy, as was the initial scoreboard damage.

"We made some mistakes but I loved that the guys played hard and stayed with it," Phoenix coach Mike Kelly said.

"That's all I can ask for."

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