WORCESTER Wolves fell agonisingly short of finalising an amazing comeback victory against Bristol Flyers last night.

It looked like a hopeless cause for Wolves as they trailed 68-43 at the third-quarter interval in front of a hushed University of Worcester Arena.

But a combination of hitherto unseen defensive grit and accuracy at the offensive end brought spectators to their feet, obliterating the arrears and leaving the sides tied at 77-77 in the last minute of the contest.

Bristol’s Justin Gray missed a three-pointer. Worcester’s Robert Crawford took the ball but was adjudged to have stepped out of bounds, leaving Flyers to now succeed with their subsequent long-distance attempt.

Miki Servera held for Wolves’ final possession before shooting wide of the target.

Crawford grabbed the rebound but was similarly cruelly adrift of the mark.

Director of basketball Ty Shaw said of the 80-77 defeat: “To come back from 25 points down to tie the game up was fantastic. I couldn’t be more proud of the guys for their effort and intensity in the final quarter.

“But we have to make sure the effort and intensity is there for the first, second and the third 10 minutes. We can’t wait that long to get going – teams in this league are too good.”

Wolves’ structure took an early blow when bustling forward Filip Kramer was forced to the bench with two quick fouls.

Clever assists from Servera for newly-signed guard Darell Combs and Daniel Johnson-Thompson levelled the scoreboard at 24-24 as the second quarter began.

Crawford was another Worcester player finding himself withdrawn from the action for the remainder of the first half after he committed his second and third fouls in swift succession.

A 38-29 half-time deficit worsened during a disastrous third period.

Careless ball handling saw Wolves limit their own opportunities to flourish while being unable to hold back Bristol’s attacks.

A double of dunks to close the quarter saw the visitors in their pomp.

An Adam Thoseby driving layup and a follow-up three started the fightback.

Crawford and Combs also connected from outside to rattle Flyers.

Buoyed by new-found belief, Wolves now wove to the basket with ease and at the same time steeled themselves on defence to harry Bristol into repeated bad passes.

A remarkable 34-12 last period was not quite enough to fully turn the tide.

Combs led the scoring with 21 points, closely followed by 19 from Thoseby.

Crawford was Wolves’ only other double-digit scorer with 14.

Wolves will next be in league action at the University of Worcester Arena on Friday, October 19, against Manchester Giants.

Before then they take part in the British Basketball All-Stars Championship at London’s Copper Box Arena on Sunday, October 14 (1pm).

Last season’s eight top teams make up the tournament with a raft of one-off features including 12-minute matches and a five-point line.

“It’ll be a different event,” added Shaw. “We’ll study the rules and figure out how to approach it. Ahead of that we’ll get into our planning ready for the Manchester game in a couple of weeks.”