In the crowded sporting landscape in New Zealand's biggest city, the Breakers have emerged as the best team - and the hottest ticket - in town. Kris Shannon of APNZ examines why.
1. Blend of local/international talent
The Breakers have found the perfect mix between developing local talent and injecting the team with valuable overseas players - usually a problematic area for New Zealand sides in transtasman competitions.
Americans Cedric Jackson and Gary Wilkinson are two of the best imports in the league, while the growth of Tom Abercrombie and Alex Pledger presents a clear pathway into professional basketball for New Zealand's youngsters. There is no better environment in which future Tall Blacks can learn, with development players Josh Bloxham, Isaac
Fotu and Dion Prewster practising every day with a core of Australian NBL veterans - Aussies CJ Bruton and Daryl Corletto and Kiwis Dillon Boucher and Mika Vukona.
2. Practice
NBA All-Star Allen Iverson may not have agreed - greeting questioning about missing practices with an exasperated, "Practice?! We're talking about practice?'' - but the Breakers' attribute a lot of their intensity during games to what they do during the week at their North Shore gym.
Breakers' trainings have become legendary for their competitiveness, with Bruton - voted the league's worst trash talker - constantly chirping and teammates nearly coming to blows on occasion. Coach Andrej Lemanis has said a particularly aggravated practice would always be followed by a high-intensity performance on game night, so you would be unlikely to find any Breaker loafing or treating training as a bit of fun.