Diário Ao-Vivo

Nova Zelândia - NBL 05/04 07:30 6 Auckland Tuatara vs Hawke’s Bay Hawks - View
Nova Zelândia - NBL 05/11 07:30 7 Auckland Tuatara vs Manawatu Jets - View
Nova Zelândia - NBL 05/16 07:30 8 Otago Nuggets vs Auckland Tuatara - View
Nova Zelândia - NBL 05/18 04:00 8 Southland Sharks vs Auckland Tuatara - View
Nova Zelândia - NBL 05/24 07:30 9 Auckland Tuatara vs Nelson Giants - View
Nova Zelândia - NBL 06/01 04:00 10 Auckland Tuatara vs Wellington Saints - View

Resultados

Nova Zelândia - NBL 04/27 04:00 5 [10] Manawatu Jets v Auckland Tuatara [2] W 79-98
Nova Zelândia - NBL 04/24 07:30 5 [3] Auckland Tuatara v Franklin Bulls [2] W 92-74
Nova Zelândia - NBL 04/19 07:30 4 [3] Auckland Tuatara v Southland Sharks [11] W 94-54
Nova Zelândia - NBL 04/14 03:00 3 [7] Canterbury Rams v Auckland Tuatara [6] W 99-111
Nova Zelândia - NBL 04/12 07:30 3 [10] Nelson Giants v Auckland Tuatara [5] L 88-84
Nova Zelândia - NBL 04/06 06:30 2 [3] Whai v Auckland Tuatara [8] W 72-92
Nova Zelândia - NBL 04/04 06:30 2 [11] Auckland Tuatara v Taranaki Mountain Airs [6] W 84-77
Nova Zelândia - NBL 03/31 02:00 1 [5] Wellington Saints v Auckland Tuatara [5] L 110-80
Amigáveis de Clubes 03/16 02:30 - Auckland Tuatara v Taranaki Mountain Airs L 74-91
Nova Zelândia - NBL 07/23 06:00 1 [1] Auckland Tuatara v Canterbury Rams [2] L 82-93
Nova Zelândia - NBL 07/21 07:00 2 [1] Auckland Tuatara v Franklin Bulls [4] W 92-67
Nova Zelândia - NBL 07/16 06:00 15 [1] Auckland Tuatara v Wellington Saints [5] L 93-102

The Auckland Tuatara are a New Zealand basketball team based in Auckland. The Tuatara compete in the National Basketball League (NBL) and play their home games at Eventfinda Stadium. Founded in Tasmania in 2019 as the Southern Huskies, the team relocated to Auckland in 2020 and for two years were known as the Auckland Huskies. In December 2021, the team was purchased by the owners of the Auckland Tuatara baseball team.

History

In Tasmania

In 2016, sights were set on an Australian NBL franchise returning to Tasmania. The Hobart Chargers of the South East Australian Basketball League (SEABL) wanted to be "NBL ready" in three years. In 2018, plans to get the Chargers into the Australian NBL morphed into an overarching Tasmanian bid for a proposed new franchise to be called Southern Huskies led by former Hobart Devils player, Justin Hickey. The Huskies bid ultimately fell through when Hickey failed to acquire the Derwent Entertainment Centre (DEC), compounded with the league believing there were several hurdles and shortcomings with the bid. The licence subsequently went to the South East Melbourne Phoenix for the 2019–20 season and later the Tasmania JackJumpers were accepted into the Australian NBL for the 2021–22 season.

In November 2018, reports began to surface that the Southern Huskies would be entering the New Zealand NBL in 2019, with the Huskies viewing the New Zealand league as a launch pad to the Australian NBL and the stronger competition more appealing than the various Australian state leagues. The inclusion, while an exciting one for the New Zealand league, did present a number of unprecedented challenges for the competition, with flights to Tasmania problematic for New Zealand's less financially well-off franchises, while double or triple-headers on New Zealand trips for the Huskies were a looming issue. Despite these concerns, the move had the support of the existing eight NZNBL franchises. On 5 December 2018, a five-year contract was signed between the New Zealand NBL and the Southern Huskies, marking the first time in New Zealand sporting history that an overseas team had joined a New Zealand owned league.

The 2019 season saw each New Zealand team visit Tasmania to play the Huskies at least once, while the Huskies played every New Zealand team in New Zealand as well, playing double-headers each time. As part of the agreement, the Huskies assisted with the cost for New Zealand teams to travel to Tasmania to play, with the NZNBL Board not wanting to increase the New Zealand teams' expenses through this move. The Huskies' nine home games in 2019 were split between the Derwent Entertainment Centre in Hobart and the Silverdome in Launceston. Coached by former Australian NBL player Anthony Stewart, the inaugural squad included imports Jalen Billups and Tre Nichols alongside Harry Froling, Marcel Jones, Craig Moller and Jordan Vandenberg. The Huskies concluded their first season in the NZNBL missing the post-season with a fifth-place finish and a 9–9 record.

On 27 June 2019, the Huskies announced that they would rebrand as the Tasmanian Huskies for the 2020 season in order to remove any stigma of a division within the state. This announcement came days after it was revealed that any new team from the state in the Australian NBL must be branded Tasmanian. However, on 9 August 2019, the Huskies withdrew from the New Zealand NBL after they claimed their relationship with Basketball Tasmania became untenable, with mounting debts also cited as a factor for disbanding.

NBL1

On 17 December 2018, following the Hobart Chargers' decision to not enter the new NBL1 competition, the Southern Huskies entered the Hobart Huskies into the inaugural 2019 NBL1 season with both men's and women's teams. The Hobart Huskies were abolished after one season following the demise of the Southern Huskies.

In Auckland

In May 2020, the Southern Huskies re-emerged and relocated permanently to Auckland, New Zealand, and became the Auckland Huskies. They subsequently entered the 2020 New Zealand NBL season, a competition that was revised and modified due the COVID-19 pandemic. Coached by former Australian and New Zealand NBL player Kevin Braswell, the 2020 squad featured Leon Henry, Izayah Le'afa and Tohi Smith-Milner. The Huskies' 2020 campaign saw them lose in the second elimination final after finishing third with an 8–6 record.

For the 2021 New Zealand NBL season, the Huskies played at Eventfinda Stadium. The 2021 squad featured Justin Bibbs, Chris Johnson, Jeremy Kendle and Tom Vodanovich.

In December 2021, the owners of the Auckland Tuatara baseball team purchased the NZNBL licence from the Huskies owners and re-named the team the Auckland Tuatara. Behind the likes of Chris Johnson, Robert Loe and Dontae Russo-Nance, the Tuatara finished fifth in the 2022 regular season with a 10–8 record and went on to reach the NBL final for the first time in franchise history. In the final, they lost 81–73 to the Otago Nuggets.

In 2023, the squad was highlighted by Australian imports Cameron Gliddon and Jarrad Weeks alongside Robert Loe and Reuben Te Rangi. The Tuatara finished the regular season with a league-best 13–5 record behind Loe's MVP season. They went on to reach their second straight NBL final, where they lost 93–82 to the Canterbury Rams.

O Auckland Tuatara é um time profissional de basquete sediado em Auckland, Nova Zelândia. O time compete na Liga Nacional de Basquete da Nova Zelândia (NBL) e joga seus jogos em casa na Trusts Arena. A equipe é de propriedade da Auckland Tuatara Basketball Limited, uma empresa controlada pela Auckland Basketball Association.

O Tuatara foi fundado em 2006 e entrou na NBL na temporada de 2007. A equipe chegou aos playoffs em sua primeira temporada, mas foi eliminada na primeira rodada. O Tuatara alcançou as finais da NBL em 2010, mas perdeu para o Wellington Saints em três jogos.

A equipe é liderada pelo técnico Kevin Braswell, que está no cargo desde 2016. Braswell levou o Tuatara aos playoffs em todas as temporadas em que foi técnico da equipe.

O Tuatara tem uma forte base de fãs em Auckland e é uma das equipes mais populares da NBL. A equipe também é conhecida por sua forte defesa e é uma das melhores equipes defensivas da liga.

O Tuatara é uma das equipes mais bem-sucedidas da NBL, conquistando quatro campeonatos (2013, 2014, 2015 e 2018). A equipe também foi vice-campeã da NBL em quatro ocasiões (2010, 2012, 2016 e 2017).

O Tuatara é um dos times de basquete mais populares da Nova Zelândia e é uma das equipes mais bem-sucedidas da NBL. A equipe tem uma forte base de fãs e é conhecida por seu estilo de jogo defensivo.