Essex Pirates

The Essex Pirates were a British Basketball League team from Southend-on-Sea, in the county of Essex. They were founded in 2009 and played their home games at the Southend Leisure & Tennis Centre. Following the loss of a major sponsor, the franchise withdrew from the league just two weeks prior to the start of the 2011-12 season and have remained inactive since,[1] with much of their former fan-base now following Essex Leopards.[2]

Essex Pirates
LeagueBritish Basketball League
Established2009
Folded2011
HistoryEssex Pirates
2009-2011
ArenaSouthend Leisure & Tennis Centre
(Capacity: 1,100)
LocationSouthend-on-Sea, Essex
Ownership Tim Lewis

History

Basketball in Essex

Prior to the creation of the Pirates franchise in 2009, the county of Essex had previous flirtations with top-level basketball through the Essex Leopards franchise, still a synonymous name with the area. After mounting costs forced the Greater London Leopards to look away from their traditional London Arena home, the franchise moved out of London and settled for a new nest in Brentwood in 1998. The venture lasted for five seasons before the club folded, to be replaced with the supporter-backed Essex & Herts Leopards in 2004. Though many fans consider it to be a direct continuation of the Leopards name, the new club was, in fact, a separate entity, formed from the rubble of the Ware Rebels. The club have risen to prominence in the lower leagues of the English Basketball League, and are currently found alternating between venues in Brentwood and Basildon Sporting Village.

The foundations of the new franchise were already in place through the Essex Basketball Club’s Advanced Apprentice-ship in Sporting Excellence (AASE) basketball training programme which was present at the South East Essex College, and the ambitious plans spearheaded by the programmes’ operator Great Britain Under 20's coach Tim Lewis.[3]

Pirates set sail

The application to the British Basketball League, the country’s top league, was formally accepted on 11 June 2009, as well as plans to operate several initiatives alongside the BBL team and the existing AASE programme, included an England Basketball Division Four development team and a non-profit community coaching company to deliver coaching into primary schools across the county.[4] The following months saw plenty of action and preparation in time for the inaugural season, and the club announced their first signings in August, with the inclusion of Spaniard starlet Pablo Rodrigo, British international Kyle Dodds and BBL veteran Dean Williams, formerly of Guildford, London Towers and Thames Valley Tigers becoming the first names on the roster.[5] The eventual team sheet would be one centred on young, homegrown players, with the roster being predominantly British ranging from the ages of 20 to 26.[6]

The new team took to their home court at Southend Leisure & Tennis Centre for the first time on 3 October, in a home league encounter with London Capital, eventually going on to win a tight affair 61-60, despite being up 49-37 at the end of the 3rd quarter. Pirates 6ft11 forward Alan Metclalfe led the games’ scoring with 21 points, while Pablo Rodrigo and Colin Sing both fouled out within the last 2 minutes.[7] Pirates secured their first away win a few weeks later on 15 October, with an 82-88 victory against the Worthing Thunder, Taner Adu of the Pirates posted 29 points for the visitors. On 27 November, the club announced the signing of former Plymouth Raiders guard, Haggai Hundert.[8]

Home arenas

Southend Leisure & Tennis Centre (2009-2011)

Season-by-season records

Season Division Tier Regular Season Post-Season Trophy Cup Head Coach
Finish Played Wins Losses Points Win %
Essex Pirates
2009–10 BBL 1 12th 36 7 29 14 0.194 Did Not Qualify 1st Round (BT) 1st Round (BC) Tim Lewis
2010–11 BBL 1 12th 33 1 32 2 0.030 Did Not Qualify 1st Round (BT) 1st Round (BC) Tim Lewis

Notable former players

gollark: I would recommend against #1, because weirdly enough people like being able to write, download and run programs.
gollark: In potatOS I do #2. Unfortunately the sandboxing implementation is about 500 lines of code, very version-specific because it runs half the BIOS for weird internal reasons, and has several known holes.
gollark: There are two ways around this:- make your "OS" unable to run arbitrary code and instead use a highly limited shell/GUI- sane sandboxing via providing no/a limited FS API to environments where you can run arbitrary code
gollark: The crux of the issue is that people can via a variety of methods write and run code which can edit your thing even if you pointlessly meddle with the shell.
gollark: No.

References

  1. "Home - BBL - British Basketball League". BBL - British Basketball League.
  2. "Adu: Pirates sinking will hit British talent". Echo.
  3. Paul Alton (2009). "Hoop hope plan for Southend?". The Echo. Retrieved 18 November 2009.
  4. Dick Marshall (2009). "Pirates land in Southend". The Echo. Retrieved 18 November 2009.
  5. The Echo (2009). "Lewis signs Williams as the Pirates step up for hoop off". The Echo. Retrieved 18 November 2009.
  6. Chris Phillips (2009). "Pirates are shipshape". The Echo. Retrieved 18 November 2009.
  7. The Echo (2009). "Pirates start with a win". The Echo. Retrieved 18 November 2009.
  8. Chris Phillips (2009). "Pirates seek return to winning ways". The Echo. Retrieved 30 November 2009.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.