Hobart Chargers is a NBL1 South club based in Hobart, Tasmania. The club fields a team in both the Men's and Women's NBL1 South. The Chargers play their home games at the Hobart Netball and Sports Centre and Pembroke Park's South East Stadium.
Club history
Early years
In 1981, the Hobart Hornets[1] entered the South East Australian Basketball League (SEABL) for the league's inaugural season. After two seasons in the SEABL,[2] the team withdrew from the league due to the introduction of the Hobart Devils in the National Basketball League (NBL) in 1983. The Hornets re-entered the SEABL in 1990.[3] Between 1990 and 1996, Hobart had seven straight seasons of missing the playoffs under coaches Denis Hyland (1990–91; 1993–95), Danny Adamson (1992), and Ross Park (1996).[4]
Chargers in the SEABL
The Chargers name was born in 1997 after the demise of the Hobart Devils.[3] The Chargers immediately saw success as they won back-to-back SEABL South Conference championships in 1997 and 1998. In 2000 and 2002, they not only won their third and fourth South Conference titles,[5][6][7] but were successful in claiming the ABA National championship in both years.[8] During this period, a Hobart Chargers women's team had an unsuccessful five-year run between 1998 and 2002, as they failed to make a playoff berth in that time.[4]
The Chargers' inaugural coach, Mark Chivers, ended his 11-year tenure following the 2007 season.[4] In 2008, Dan Krebs took over as coach of the Chargers and guided them to their fifth South Conference title.[4] They went on to win the overall SEABL championship after defeating East Conference champions, the Knox Raiders, in a contest that earned the winning team a semi-finals place in the Australian Club Championships.[9] In the ACC semi-finals, the Chargers defeated the Melbourne Tigers 128–126 to move on to the grand final. There they were defeated 103–99 by the Rockhampton Rockets to finish as national runners-up.[10] Despite his successful season with the Chargers, Krebs was replaced as coach in 2009 with former NBL player Anthony Stewart.[4]
In 2010, the Lady Chargers re-entered the league. In 2014, they made their way through to their first ever conference final.[11] After winning the South Conference championship, they went on to lose in the SEABL grand final against the Brisbane Spartans.[12]
In September 2016, former Tasmanian Labor premier, David Bartlett, was appointed president of the Chargers.[13] The club had numerous issues off the court at the time of Bartlett's appointment, including being $120,000 in debt.[14] Financial problems almost resulted in the men's team being booted from the 2016 SEABL playoffs, while questions remained about the financial security of the women's program.[13]
Bartlett had plans for the Chargers to become the lead candidate for Tasmania's return to the NBL. He wanted the club to be "NBL ready" in three years and win at least one SEABL championship over those three years.[15] These plans were gaining momentum in 2017[16] but in 2018, plans to get the Chargers into the NBL morphed into an overarching Tasmanian bid for a proposed new franchise to be called Southern Huskies.[14][17] The bid ultimately fell through[18][19] and the Huskies franchise went on to have a tumultuous one-year stint in the New Zealand NBL in 2019.[20] In 2020, the Tasmania JackJumpers were accepted into the Australian NBL for the 2021–22 season.[21]
Up until the 2016 season, for more than a decade, the Chargers had played at the Hobart Netball and Sports Centre, but were forced to train at New Town High and Warrane Stadium because the centre was not available during the week.[22] Bartlett secured a deal for the 2017 SEABL season that saw the Chargers return to the Derwent Entertainment Centre.[23] The Chargers also introduced a new logo and playing strip for the 2017 season.[15]
In 2018, the Chargers men's team won the SEABL championship with a victory over the Nunawading Spectres in the grand final.[24]
^"Copeland makes the numbers add up". The Age. 14 September 2002. Archived from the original on 28 April 2024. In the South East Australian Basketball League, Hobart beat Mildura 124-109 to win the South Conference crown, Victoria Giants new signing David Biwer judged most valuable player in the grand final with 33 points and 19 rebounds.