"When you get into tournament situations, you have to be on point with what you are doing throughout the day and how you prepare and how you are resting and how you are recovering because the games happen really quickly. This is our fourth in five days with a travel day in between, but the other teams have been through the same, our guys might not be used to that workload but this will be good for them. The last World Cup we played five games in six days, it is a tough, tough ask, in some ways it is more good learning experience for them."
Henare also made it clear to his team his expectations when they line up against China at the same Chengdu venue in less than 24 hours.
"I want to see more application to detail, instructions and being able to execute on the floor. We have spoken about our baseline effort being better than other teams and I thought that was a big step backwards. Lithuania out rebounded us which they did in the first game, those messages arent sinking in right now, but the good thing is we have a couple of games in the next couple of days to rectify that."
New Zealands good start was on the back of a dominance in the paint by Sam Timmins, with six early points and another spark from the bench in the form of five quick points for Derone Raukawa, the lead was threatening double digits before poor ball control and cheap fouls allowed Lithuania to close to just one point down at the main break.
From then the game took many turns, with both teams going on small runs, but neither could break the shackles. New Zealand drew level at 59 with a remarkable three-point play from Raukawa, making a jump shot while being fouled and then nailing the free throw. But it was Lithuania who remained calm in the closing moments, running their offence and disrupting the New Zealanders who rushed their shots or took wrong options.
Tall Blacks 62
Raukawa 12 points; Timmins 10 points, 11 rebounds; Delany 6 &9;
Lithuania 67
Vaitk 11; Martinas 10; Kristupas 10
- This story has been automatically published using a media release from Basketball New Zealand