Match Report: Wildcats vs Kings Rnd12 NBL26
The Perth Wildcats were unable to reel in a hot-shooting Sydney Kings outfit on Friday night at RAC Arena, falling 108–79 after the visitors seized control through a dominant second half performance.
While Perth matched Sydney for long stretches early, a decisive third-quarter burst, led by Kendrick Davis, proved the difference as the Kings pulled away.
The Wildcats took the first possession but struggled to convert early looks, with Sydney opening the scoring through Xavier Cooks. Elijah Pepper eventually broke Perth’s drought with a confident pull-up jumper, before Dylan Windler added a triple to spark the home side.
Both teams traded baskets throughout the opening period, with Pepper attacking the offensive glass and Jo Lual-Acuil Jr asserting himself inside. Perth’s bench provided early energy, as Ben Henshall and David Okwera combined for second-chance points and defensive pressure.
Sunday Dech knocked down a timely corner three, but late execution favoured the Kings. Cooks converted inside and added a free throw in the final seconds to give Sydney a slim edge at the first break.
The second quarter continued in a similar vein, with neither side able to break away. Lat Mayen gave Perth a lift with a three to draw the Wildcats level, while David Duke Jr consistently attacked downhill, finishing through contact and creating opportunities for teammates.
Kendrick Davis, however, began to find rhythm for the visitors, knocking down a key three midway through the term to stretch the Kings’ lead.
Perth responded through Dech and Windler, capitalising at the free-throw line late as Sydney entered foul trouble. Lual-Acuil Jr produced a highlight defensive sequence with back-to-back blocks to lift the crowd, but the Kings closed the half more efficiently to maintain their advantage.
Sydney emerged from the break with purpose, scoring the first five points of the third quarter through Cooks and Davis. Davis then drained consecutive threes as the Kings surged into a double-digit lead, forcing an early Wildcats timeout.
Duke Jr briefly steadied Perth with a corner three, while Windler and Pepper both connected from deep to halt Sydney’s momentum. However, each Wildcats score was quickly answered, with Davis continuing to punish from beyond the arc and in transition.
Ben Henshall and Kristian Doolittle worked to keep Perth within touch, but Davis reached 30 points before the end of the quarter as the Kings controlled tempo and spacing. Sydney outscored Perth 32–21 in the term to open a commanding buffer.
Perth needed a strong start to the final term and found it through Doolittle, who knocked down a corner three to lift the Red Army. Once again, however, Davis responded, scoring inside and from the perimeter as Sydney quickly restored control.
A backcourt violation and a run of missed perimeter shots stalled Perth’s comeback hopes, while Cooks and Kouat Noi capitalised at the other end. Duke Jr provided a brief spark with a three and a steal, but the Kings’ offence continued to flow freely.
As the margin ballooned beyond 20, Sydney rotated through its bench while maintaining intensity. Noa Kouakou-Heugue and Dontae Russo-Nance added late points for Perth, but the result was beyond doubt as the Kings closed the game.
Despite competitive first-half play, the Wildcats were unable to contain Sydney’s third-quarter explosion, with Kendrick Davis proving the difference on the night.
The Sydney Kings took over from halftime to defeat the Perth Wildcats 108–79 at RAC Arena.
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