Q&A With Kia Nurse

Much of the focus has been on the young Canadian men making waves in the hoops community, but on the women’s side of things, Kia Nurse is perhaps Canada’s biggest star in the making–at least per capita.

Nurse’s Basketball Canada bio

She is the younger sister of Edmonton Oilers defensemen Darnel Nurse and the niece of former NFL quarterback Donovan McNabb so there is no doubting her athletic potential.

Nurse starred for Team Canada over the summer and led her team to qualify for the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio.

At 19 years old, she is just as big a part of the future of Canadian basketball as anyone else.

The University of Connecticut Husky sat down with Sportsnet writer Dave Zarum for a 1-on-1 Q&A.


 

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Nurse, courtesy Canada Basketball

Dave Zarum: You’ve always proudly represented Hamilton. It maybe not quite be on the hoops radar in Canada in the same way as some GTA cities like Brampton, etc, but what was the basketball scene like growing up there?

Kia Nurse: On the women’s side Hamilton is a hotbed for basketball talent. There’s a lot of great female players who have come out of the city. I played with a lot of them when I was younger on a team called Hamilton Transway—our club team—and we were a dominant powerhouse. We won seven provincial championships in a row. So, yeah… I grew up in that environment, and my mom and sister always played, so there’s a vibrant scene there.

DZ: You were able to stay in Canada and still lock down a scholarship to an esteemed program like UConn. Until recently that path was quite rare, but people like yourself and now Kentucky-bound Jamal Murray are able to parlay high school careers in Canada to scholarships at some of the biggest, most iconic programs around. I can’t help but compare your path to the NCAA to someone like your Team Canada teammate, Nirra Fields. Are you familiar with her story? [ed. Fields left her Montreal home early and attended prep schools in the U.S., including Oak Hill Academy before eventually living with former Lakers head coach Mike Brown and his family and securing a scholarship to UCLA. Check out Zarum’s profile of Fields from the Sportsnet magazine archives]

KN: Yeah, she was gone forever. She’s basically an American now, we count her as an American.

DZ: Haha, exactly! Still, that was always the traditional route. You said you wanted to go to UConn since you were a little kid, but at what point did you realize you could accomplish that goal while staying at home?

KN: Obviously I’d heard a lot of talk about going to prep school in the US, and that if you wanted to those big college offers that’s where you had to go. I figured, ‘Well I always wanted a chance to play in the NCAA tournament.’ That was my original goal. And then when I started playing tournaments in the States during the summers with our rep team I ended up being seen by Connecticut twice. Suddenly I started receiving interest from NCAA schools that were actually contending for national championships. I was like, ‘Woah!’ It was a whole new thing for me. I never thought that would happen. I always figured I’d be at a program that just got to the tournament, and I’d go every year and experience that, make it as far as I can.
But when I started to get interest from those bigger schools I started thinking ‘Well, maybe I have a chance to do more than that now.’ When I was younger I always thought: If I’m good enough, they’ll find me. And nowadays there’s so many more opportunities to stay at home, prep schools opening up, opportunities to get seen—for girls and boys basketball. Going over to the States is obviously beneficial, but now that you can stay in Canada is incredible.

DZ: “If I’m good enough they’ll find me” is a pretty bad-ass mentality to carry with you. Where do you think you got that from?

KN: That’s a family thing, for sure. My mindset has been shaped by them my entire life. Personally I had always sold myself short. I never really believed I was as good as people told me I was. I would think “I’m good, but I’m not UConn good.” Then it slowly dawned on me when they started coming around with offers, “They don’t just recruit anybody.” I figured out I could play, if I had confidence I could play.

DZ: Was there a single turning point?

KN: I came back from China with the national team and played a tournament in Washington—this was right before Grade 12. I was super skinny because I didn’t eat for two weeks but I played well and after this one tournament I was getting calls from Kentucky, Tennessee, Notre Dame, all those schools, and I thought ‘I have a shot at this. I think I could be good.’ I still doubt myself, and it wasn’t until that final Pan Am game where I realized ‘You need to have confidence in yourself because look at how you play when you do. You’re good.’

DZ: Wait… You’re talking about just a few weeks ago?

KN: Yeah, honestly. That was the first time I really realized ‘You need to believe in yourself more, because look at what you’re capable of.’

DZ: Glad you brought up that Gold Medal game. At one point at the end you were on the free throw line with a chance to ice the game. What’s going through your head in that moment?

KN: They were chanting “MVP!” when I got to the line, so it was like, “God, now I really have to make the shot!” [laughs]. They were chanting MVP! I can’t miss it now! That was absolutely what was going through my mind. But I was pretty confident at that point because I had shot, I think, 50,000 free throws that game. Phew, when I saw it go in…Crazy.

DZ: One of the most noticeable thing about the makeup of the national team is the wide range in terms of experience, the balance between youth versus veterans. Has that dynamic changed at all over the past month? Are the vets still making you go on coffee runs?

KN: The dynamic is pretty much the same. We’re fortunate to have a great group of veterans who make sure that each and every day they’re teaching you something new. They relish that role, in being leaders. But I’m a permanent rookie, forever. Maybe when I turn 20 that will change. Maybe. But it’s great to have them around, not only for their experience on the court but off the court as well. They’ve gone through everything from dealing with pro contracts, letting you know places you should or shouldn’t play, everything. They’ve just been phenomenal.

DZ: How far ahead have you thought in terms of your career?

KN: I have three more years left at Connecticut, but the first year went by in, like, two minutes. So you have to think everything is moving so quickly now that you do have to look ahead. I hope one day to play in the WNBA. And then a lot of the WNBA players go to play overseas as well, so I hope to do that, too, at a great location with great fans. Two of my teammates [at UConn] were drafted to the WNBA this past year and I was able to go to the draft with them and see what that was like. It was really interesting, really cool to see that atmosphere.

Canadians to watch in the NCAA

I’ve talked a significant amount of the Canadians currently in the NBA, but this is just the first wave of talent.

Donnovan Bennett of Sportsnet has compiled a list of the most intriguing Canadian players currently playing down south in the NCAA. These players comprise what will be the next wave of Canadian basketball players looking to make names for themselves in the NBA.

This article can be found on Sportsnet.ca


DONNOVAN BENNETT NOVEMBER 23, 2015, 11:22 AM

In NCAA college basketball this season there are multiple Canadians poised for a big year on teams who can make a run in March to the Final Four. Here are a few homegrown talents to keep an eye on, plus some insight on them from former national team member and current Executive Vice President and Assistant GM of Canada basketball Rowan Barrett.

 

Kyle Wiltjer

Position: Power forward
Eligibility: Senior
School: Gonzaga

Wiltjer is one of the premier stretch four’s in the NCAA. Last year he averaged 16.8 points per game and shot 54% from the floor, including 46.6% from three. Named a preseason AP All-American, this year he’s expected to put up even bigger numbers as the focus of the Zags offence. He is the latest in a long line of Canadians to star for Gonzaga, most recently following Kevin Pangos and Kelly Olynyk. Although Kyle was born in Portland, Oregon Wiltjer gets his Canadian nationality from his father and former national team member Greg Wiltjer.

Rowan Barrett says: A highly skilled player that can score the ball and does a great job stretching the floor with his ability to shoot the three point shot with high efficiency.

For more: Check out this one-on-one interview with Wiltjer and Sportsnet.

 

Jamal Murray

Position: Point guard
Eligibility: Freshman
School: Kentucky

Just 18 years old, but the Canadian in the NCAA with the highest basketball IQ is probably Jamal Murray. Murray also has the highest upside, as he’s already projected to be a top-five pick if he decides to declare for the NBA draft. Albany head coach Will Brown already called him “the best player in the country”. The Kitchener-Waterloo native is playing off the ball quite a bit beside sophomore Tyler Ulis but he projects as a PG in the NBA.

Rowan Barrett says: Relentless competitor with maturity beyond his years. Unique in his ability to do all things offensively, on the basketball floor.

For more: Check out Prep School Confidential, Gare Joyce’s Sportsnet magazine feature on Murray & alma matter Orangeville Prep.

 

Xavier Rathan-Mayes

Position: Point guard
Eligibility: Sophomore
School: Florida State

Murray might not be the only lottery pick this summer— and he might not even be the most prolific Canadian scorer either. Xavier Rathan-Mayes had the chance to be a first round pick last year before deciding to come back to FSU. Last year the Markham native was named to the All-ACC freshman team, becoming the first freshman in ACC history to score 30 or more points three times just the second freshman to lead the Seminoles in scoring. The dead eye shooter who is poised to finish in the top 10 in ACC scoring again actually started his career as a shooting guard before making the transition to the point since being on campus at Tallahassee.

Rowan Barrett says: High level of confidence with explosive scoring abilities, and now has grown as a facilitator as well.

For more: Check out Florida Statement, Dave Zarum’s feature on Rathan-Mayes from his freshman season.

 

Dillon Brooks

Position: Small Forward
Eligibility: Sophomore
School: Oregon

One of the most intense players in college basketball is Oregon’s Dillon Brooks. The Mississauga native is continuing the long line of Canadians to attend Las Vegas powerhouse Findlay Prep and go on to have instant NCAA success, joining the likes of Tristan Thompson and Anthony Bennett. Brooks was a Pac-12 All Freshman and finished as third in freshman scoring in the conference with 11.5 PPG. One of the most versatile Canadians in the NCAA, he allows Oregon head Coach Dana Altman great flexibility as he plays big in small line ups but has the ball skills to play on the perimeter when the Ducks go big.

Rowan Barrett says: Very competitive player who is extremely aggressive, with a shooting touch.

For more: Check out The Boys of Summer, Sportsnet’s #BigRead on Brooks’ former AAU team, CIA Bounce.

 

Chris Boucher

Position: Power forward
Eligibility: Senior
School: Oregon

Boucher was the NJCAA player of the year staring for Northwest College. Chris averaged 22.5 points, 11.8 rebounds, and 4.7 blocks per game last season with Northwest College in Wyoming after playing his freshman year at New Mexico Junior College. The Montreal-born Boucher may have to make the most of his first year in Eugene as the NCAA has ruled he only has one more year of eligibility although the Ducks plan to appeal the decision.

Rowan Barrett says: Long athletic player who has had success at the JUCO level.

 

Other Canadians to watch:
Dylan Ennis (Oregon)
Duane Notice (South Carolina)
Jalen Poyser (UNLV)
Chris Egi (Harvard)

 

Thoughts on the new-look Toronto Raptors

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Kyle Lowry (left) and Jonas Valanciunas (right), courtesy Bleacher Report

7-5 to start the season. 6th in the Eastern Conference.

Is that what GM Masai Ujiri and Head Coach Dwayne Casey had in mind when they retooled the Toronto Raptors in the offseason?

Not likely.

Don’t get me wrong, they haven’t looked bad…they just haven’t looked good.

They dropped a thriller in the late-going to the now 12-0 Golden State Warriors last night and held their own in doing so, but a loss is a loss.

The Eastern Conference in the NBA is not the walk in the park that it had been over the past two or three seasons.

Every game is becoming more and more meaningful because there’s a good chance 45 wins this season won’t guarantee the Raptors a playoff spot.

Going into the season the Raptors were considered a contender for a top-3 playoff spot in the East alongside the Cleveland Cavaliers, Atlanta Hawks and Chicago Bulls but the emergence of the Boston Celtics, New York Knicks and the resurrection of the Miami Heat leave the Raptors in more dire straits than they may have anticipated.

Offseason acquisitions DeMarre Carroll, Cory Joseph and Luis Scola have slotted in to their new roles nicely but ultimately it takes time to gel completely into a new system with new teammates.

I believe the Raptors have the personnel to be serious contenders for at least a division title, and a high playoff seed as well but in order to do this they need to win the games that they’re supposed to win which has hurt them so far.

Of their five losses, three have come against teams with records below .500. That simply isn’t good enough anymore.

Beating the Warriors is a tall task. Beating the Orlando Magic is not. If the Raptors want to be taken seriously, they cannot afford to lose games to beatable teams on a consistent basis.

In my opinion, consistency is they key to the rest of the Raptos ’15-16 campaign.

They are blessed with two stars in Kyle Lowry and DeMar DeRozan, but neither of them are superstars. Stephen Curry and LeBron James can win a basketball game pretty much single-handedly…Lowry and DeRozan would be a lot more hard-pressed to do that.

Each night needs to be a complete effort right from their stars down the the last man off the bench. There isn’t enough wiggle room to be relying on one or two players to save a game for this team.

Overall the Raptors start to the season has been very average. Things could be a lot worse, yes, but with the changes in the offseason bringing even more potential to a team whose window to win is right now, I don’t think 7-5 is good enough.

Raptors fans are tired of mediocrity being acceptable and the team has shown signs that they share that sentiment.

The turnaround needs to start sooner rather than later and when it does, the Raps have more than enough talent to carry themselves to a high playoff seed and a lengthy playoff run.

That’s one man’s opinion. What say you?

NBA Standings

NBA Statistical leaders

WolfPack Check-in

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TRU Men’s basketball, courtesy TRU

We’ve seen the rankings, we’ve heard the opinions and now the TRU WolfPack men’s and women’s basketball team are out making their mark on the Canada West division.

Both teams are undefeated through the first two weeks of the season, knocking off the University of Northern British Columbia Timberwolves and the Mount Royal University Cougars and are taking 4-0 records into their home openers this weekend.

The MacEwan University Griffins will be in town to do battle at the TCC in front of what is expected to be a sizeable crowd.

The Griffins’ men’s team brings in a somber 1-3 record while the women are right behind TRU in the standings with a 3-1 record.

Last year the WolfPack men split the season series with the Griffins 2-2 while the women went 3-1 in their four games against the Edmonton-based team.

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Taysia Worsfold, courtesy TRU

The ‘Pack women have enjoyed early stardom from incumbent starting point guard Emma Piggin who is leading the team with 15 points and 10 rebounds per game. Not a bad replacement for Second Team Canada West All-Star–now assistant coach–Jorri Duxbury.

The men, meanwhile, are singing the praises of Ukranian-born recruit V0lodymyr Iegorov who has been a stats monster so far this season averaging 25.5 points per game on the year and forming a fearsome front-court duo with Josh Wolfram. Wolfram is averaging a double-double of his own in his final season and was named the Canada West Third Star of the week.

The men are ranked #10 in the entire CIS this week and will look to continue their sparkling start to the season this Friday at 8pm. The women precede them at 6pm.

Both games, of course, will be played at the Tournament Capital Centre

“All Kelly Olynyk needed was a shot of confidence”

The following is a great feature piece from ESPN staff writer Chris Forsberg that outlines how Kamloops-boy Kelly Olynyk contributes different key aspects of the game of basketball to his Boston Celtics teammates. The piece was found on ESPN.com

***

Chris Forsberg, ESPN Staff Writer

WALTHAM, Mass. — Sometimes, all a struggling shooter needs is to see a ball go in the basket. So, with Kelly Olynyk hoop-less in consecutive games, the Boston Celtics decided that they would close out Friday’s shootaround by having Olynyk make the final shot.

He did, hitting a corner 3-pointer to close the team’s afternoon session, then went out and scored a season-high 19 points on 7-of-11 shooting with seven rebounds, four assists, four steals, and a block in Boston’s inspired 118-98 triumph over the Washington Wizards.

“We needed him to do that. He’s been struggling a little bit,” teammate Jae Crowder said of Olynyk, who had missed all eight shots he took in games against the Spurs and Pacers and sat out the entire second half against Indiana. “We broke shootaround [Friday] with him making a shot — that’s the way we ended shootaround [Friday] with him making the corner 3. So it rolled over into the game. Just trying to get his confidence where it needs to be.”

For his part, Olynyk pleaded ignorance to Boston’s shooting brainwash but couldn’t argue with the results.

“Whatever [Crowder] did, it worked,” said Olynyk. When it was suggested he should consider taking the final shot at shootaround more often, Olynyk replied, “Maybe I should.”

The Celtics are a better team when Olynyk is on the floor and they’re a much better team when Olynyk is aggressive on offense and making his shots. The third-year forward/center has established himself as the sort of advanced-stats darling whose impact isn’t always obvious with the eye test but is hammered home by the stat sheet.

Case in point: The Celtics were plus-226 in plus/minus last season when Olynyk was on the floor (1,424 minutes) and minus-213 when he was off (2,552 minutes). Sure, plus/minus is a flawed stat, but that trend has continued this season as Boston is plus-33 in Olynyk’s 67 minutes of floor time and minus-16 in the 173 minutes he’s been on the bench (or suspended).

What’s more interesting this season is that while the 7-foot Olynyk is typically regarded as an offensive player — one who stretches the floor and forces opposing bigs to guard him beyond the 3-point arc — it’s Boston’s defensive numbers with him on the floor that are most eye-popping (albeit in a small sample).

Olynyk is tops on the team with the Celtics allowing only 71.7 points per 100 possessions when he is on the court. That’s 23.5 points better than Boston’s season average of 92.5 (which ranked seventh in the NBA entering Sunday’s play). It’s also 11 points better than the next closest teammate and 30 points better than someone like Amir Johnson (typically another advanced stats darling and one of the most common big-man pairing with Olynyk this season).

Watch Olynyk and you don’t think lockdown defender. And yet the league’s player-tracking data suggests a Marc Gasol-like dominance (OK, that’s some early season hyperbole). But, according to the NBA’s player tracking data, opponents are shooting a mere 35.3 percent (12 for 34) against Olynyk and he has four blocks (second on the team behind only Jared Sullinger). What’s more, Olynyk had those four steals against the Wizards and is tied for third on the team in swipes this season (7) behind only Crowder (15) and Isaiah Thomas (10).

How does coach Brad Stevens explain Boston’s defensive dominance with Olynyk?

“I think our defense has been pretty good generally, and he’s done a pretty good job of being in the right position,” said Stevens. “We’ve talked about that. He’s got a good feel for positioning. He’s done a pretty good job of getting out to shooters when he’s guarding shooters. He hasn’t been at the 5 a lot, but when he’s been at the 5 we’ve been pretty active defensively in times where we’ve played a little bit smaller. So there’s a lot of factors that go into that.

“I think that for one person to be good, or have good numbers defensively, it’s reliant on the other four people playing good defense with him. But that’s a positive thing for sure.”

Maybe Olynyk’s stats shouldn’t surprise us too much. Among regulars during Boston’s second-half surge to the playoffs last season, Olynyk owned the best defensive rating on the team (91.1).

Asked about the reasons for the team’s quality defense when he’s on the floor, Olynyk said: “I don’t know. It’s not something you can really try and go and do, I don’t think. You’ve just got to play the way you’re playing. I don’t know. You’ve just got to play hard on both ends of the floor and try to make your teammates better on both ends of the floor.”

The challenge now is getting Olynyk to maintain his offensive aggression, because his floor-spacing abilities really open things up, especially when paired with the likes of Thomas off the bench.

“I think that the more that he can [be aggressive], the better he is,” said Stevens. “He’s a very talented player and we need him to shoot it well for us to be a good team. We don’t need him to be the greatest shooter ever, but we need him to be a threat.”

Said Sullinger: “[Olynyk] gave us a little bit of everything [Friday] — rebounding, scoring, playmaking, and he had four steals… He was very active, high hands, active as hell. It’s something he can build on. Kelly is a guy with runs, and once he gets like this, it’s kinda hard to stop him. So hopefully it carries over.”

And if it doesn’t, the Celtics can always try to get him going again at the team’s next shootaround.

Canada West Women’s Basketball 2015-16

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Here is the season preview for the women’s side of Canada West basketball

CIS basketball preview: Canada West Women
Changing dynamic challenges Canada West

By Wayne Kondro
Special to CIS

It is, says Saskatchewan Huskies and Canadian women’s senior team head coach Lisa Thomaidis, an entirely new era.

Gone are the days when the Canada West Universities Athletic Association could rip off 19 consecutive Canadian Interuniversity Sport titles (including six over a nine-year period won by former members of the Great Plains Athletic Association, which CanWest absorbed in 2003) and regularly place three or even occasionally four teams in the semi-finals. Not that they’ve become slouches. They still consistently place two teams in the semis.

But expansion of the league to 17 members undermined overall CanWest competitiveness because it spread around a thin pool of talent, though it arguably may promote development of the game over the long-term, Thomaidis says.

“Back then, we had six teams in Canada West and I know when I came to Saskatchewan, we were terrible. The reason why we got good is cause we played the Victoria’s, the U.B.C.’s, and the Alberta’s and the Calgary’s every single weekend. And it was adapt, get better, or you’re going to sink.”

“The talent level was so high, it was amazing,” Thomaidis adds. “Now, the influx of all the other schools coming into Canada West has diluted the talent. There just isn’t enough talent to be distributed among the number of teams that we have out here now.”

Coupled with the fact that American schools are now more aggressively recruiting Western Canada than in years past, often skimming off the cream of the crop, it has forced CanWest coaches to scramble to find talent in the United States, Europe and Australia, Thomaidis says. “Recruiting just gets bigger and bigger and you keep going to different frontiers” and devoting more and more time to the chase, rather than concentrating on the development of players.

Yet, if it is the passing of an era, the mighty Huskies may be the most immune to the effects, as they’re again the prohibitive favourite to garner one of CanWest’s two guaranteed berths at Canadian Interuniversity Sport’s 45th national women’s tournament being hosted by the University of New Brunswick in March.

“They could probably go undefeated this season,” says veteran Winnipeg coach Tanya McKay.

Saskatchewan has great post-perimeter balance, as well as the incredible luxury of maturity. The Huskies have no less three fifth-year players and one fourth-year player in the starting line-up. The former includes 6-3 post Dalyce Emmerson, who was named a 2nd-team All-Canadian despite having suffered from a nagging foot injury for the past two years, as well as hard-nosed guards Kelsey Trulsrud, Desarae Hogberg and Laura Dally, a third-team all-star after leading the league in three-point field goal shooting. She was also on the FISU team that captured a silver medal in Gwangju, South Korea over the summer.

What’s utterly remarkable is that the team that most coaches across the country peg as the favourite to also win the CIS crown will have an offence run by nothing less than a rookie point guard.

Okay, maybe not quite your average rookie. Sabine Dukate, after all, is a 5-9 wunderkind from Ventspiils, Latvia, who has played a few years of professional basketball in the European ranks.

“She could be the answer to our dreams” after graduating two point guards, Thomaidis says. “And she’s only going to get better and better with getting familiarity with our systems and personnel and coaches and North America.”

Backing up the quintet are another fifth-year senior, Taya Keujer, redshirt forward Kassidy Konkin and 5-10 rookie guard and Miss Basketball Alberta 2015 Megan Ahlstrom, a Calgary product who turned a full-ride offer from Boise State to become a Huskie.

Calgary may have the league’s most experienced and deepest unit despite having lost captain, principal defender and fifth-year Australian-born guard Ashley Hirons late in the preseason with a torn ACL. That will doubtless change the Dinos dynamic, and free-up about 30 minutes of playing time, but cerebral coach Damian Jennings still has several pieces to the puzzle, including fifth-year wing Claire Colborne, who’ll start along with Wales-product Kristie Sheils, point guard Anmol Mattu, post Kelsey Lund, and most likely, Emma Nieuwenhuizen, Brianna Ghali or Erin McIntosh at the wing.

Hirons’ injury will change everyone’s role, affecting both the defensive rotations and European-style ball screen offence, Jennings notes. “There are 10 teams that may have stronger starting fives than we have. But I think that over 40 minutes, we have enough miles on the clock with enough players that we can still be deep enough to cause problems.”

Regina appears to have a solid starting rotation in third-team all-star Charlotte Kot, Kehlsie Crone, Katie Polischuk, Alyssia Kajati and point guard Sidney Dobner, as well as a solid though somewhat inexperienced bench led by Christina McCusker. But coach Dave Taylor says they’ll need one of the above to step up and become the sort of All-Canadian answer in time of desperate need if the Cougars are to make anything like a run at a national medal.

Still, Taylor is hopeful the team’s balance will offset the seeming absence of an All-Canadian gun and land them a berth in the national draw. “It’s going to have to be who is hot that night and who’s got the best match-up,” he says. “But the real key is health, health, health. We just don’t have that depth.”

Alberta graduated its powerful front-line, including all-star Saskia Van Ginhoven, but retains one of the league’s best backcourts in point guard Jessilyn Fairbanks, Maddie Rogers and Megan Wickstrom. The Pandas will look to shore up the frontcourt with third-year Texas product Elle Hendershot and highly-touted rookie post Brooklyn Legault from North Vancouver. Edmonton Harry Ainlay product Mackenzie Cook had been expected to provide another presence in the paint but tore an ACL at the start of the season.

The development and maturation of the posts will ultimately determine the Pandas’ fate, says coach Scott Edwards. “We’re asking a lot of pretty inexperienced or young players that haven’t played a lot in the CIS. As they go, we will go.”

Despite the graduation of three-time All-Canadian Kris Young and league all-star Harleen Sidhu, U.B.C. can never be discounted given coach Deb Huband’s glittering history (three national titles). The Thunderbirds will regroup around savvy fifth-year point guard Diana Lee, veteran forward Adrienne Parkin, off-guard Cherub Lum and posts Kara Spotton and Andrea Strujic. Among four rookies who may eventually crack the rotation is Jessica Hanson (daughter of T-Birds men’s coach Kevin Hanson).

“There’s a lot of learning when you go from a role player or a player who’s been injured and hasn’t been held accountable,” says Huband. “Now, all of a sudden they have to be able to step on the court and hold the execution to acceptable degree” at a time when their responsibilities have significantly altered.

Victoria’s losses included all-star Cassandra Goodis, leaving coach Dani Sinclair with a starting line-up that will likely feature forwards Jenna Bugiardini and Nicole Karstein, along with last year’s league rookie of the year Amira Giannattasio and fellow guards Kristy Gallagher and Jenna Krug. Among newcomers expected to contribute are provincial juvenile team members Marissa Dheensaw and Avery Snider.

“I think we’ve shown that we can score,” says Sinclair. But on the other end of the floor, “we need to keep the ball in front of us and then rebound. We’ve struggled to rebound. … We need to have more of an aggressive mindset on the boards.”

McKay enters her 21st year at Winnipeg’s helm having graduated 2nd-team all-star guard Stephanie Kleysen but the Wesmen return third-teamer Megan Noonan. Joining her in the starting line-up are point guard Kerri Kuzbyt, German rookie wing Lena Wenke, who toiled for her country’s cadet and development teams, along with posts Skylar Boulanger and Renetha Burton, an Arizona-born transfer from Alberta’s Olds College.

The Wesmen need to play with discipline, McKay says. “Right now, our inside game is not on the same page as our perimeter game. They haven’t met each other halfway yet.”

Trinity Western will rely heavily on the trio of Tessa Ratzlaff and league all-rookie selections Kayla Gordon and Jessica Brown to provide rebounding prowess and offensive punch to offset last year’s history of collapses and close losses in the final minutes of games, says coach Cheryl Jean-Paul. To that end, the Spartans must “stay healthy, knock down open shots and get tougher defensively every week – just like everyone else.”

Former men’s coach Dave Adams assumes the distaff helm at Lethbridge after Erin McAleenan bailed for York. Rookie Magrath guard Teesha Olson, Lethbridge College transfer Lily Moradel, and SAIT transfer post Malayah Bruno will likely be in the rotation, along with another rookie, Lethbridge Chinook product Katie Keith, as well as Danielle Fritzke, Zoe Dahl and Mariah Miller.

“Right now, we’re playing the point by committee,” says Adams. “For us going forward, we need to create culture and we need to infuse our program with winners.”

Brandon coach Novell Thomas continues the grind of rebuilding a program and hopes to improve on last season’s 3-17 record with a line-up featuring some combination of California-born guards Aleah Bridges and Keisha Cox, forwards Kaela Cranston and Amy Williams, University of Winnipeg transfer Lauren Anderson and Maryland-born post Alyssa Montgomery.

“We’re big,” says Thomas, a former member of the Canadian men’s national team and erstwhile European pro. “We’ve got four 6-1, 6-2 kids. We’re deeper than we have been, especially at the post positions. We definitely have more experience. … We just have to use our length and height and pound the ball inside.”

Manitoba hopes to garner more than one league win from a mix featuring forwards Montana Kinzel, Rebecca Potter and Emma Thompson, and guards Claire Harvey, Nicole Konieczny, Jenilyn Monton and Alyssa Lucier. The Bisons will try “to be a little bit more up tempo, and then, scoring by committee, so trying to really make sure they understand we need at least four people in double digits,” says coach Michelle Hynes.

Over in the six-team Explorer division, the coaches peg Fraser Valley as the favourite to earn one of the three available playoff spots.

Fraser Valley lost nearly two-thirds of its offensive firepower from last season, but some of that will be offset with the additions of Sydney Williams, Canada West rookie of the year in 2014 while playing at Thompson Rivers, and Shayna Cameron, player of the year in the British Columbia college ranks last season. Among other recruits are Mission product Taylor Claggett and Maple Ridge point guard Kate Head, who’s been starting at the point. Returnees include forward Kayli Sartori, while post Katie Brink is expected to rejoin the line-up around Christmas when she recovers from a leg injury.

“We’re a lot more perimeter-oriented than we have been for many years so the pace, we want to push it a little more and we want to move the ball,” says crafty Cascades coach Al Tuchscherer, who just two seasons ago steered his troops to a CIS bronze medal.

Dave Oldham replaces Alberta legend Rob Poole at the helm of MacEwan and his chances of a successful debut are bolstered by the return of all-stars Megan Wood and Kelly Fagan. Also in the starting rotation are Paige Knull, Kayla Ivicak and point guard Kendall Lydon. Ex-starter Kelly O’Hallahan is expected to return from ACL surgery around Xmas.

“We’ll lean on Kelly and Megan a lot,” says Oldham, who led Spruce Grove High School to eight consecutive provincial tournament appearances and a pair of silver medals. “Kelly last year was a double-double, and Megan averaged 18 points a game. They’re very skilled and great decision-makers, fifth-year kids who had four years with Rob Poole, so they’ve learned the game at a high level.”

Thompson Rivers suffered a huge loss with the graduation of second-team all-star point guard Jorri Duxbury but returns third-teamer Taiysa Worsfold, along with forward Kassie Colonna, point guard Emma Piggin and wing Michelle Bos. Burnaby rookie Lailani Carney steps immediately into the starting rotation.

“Everyone is one injury away from a drastic season,” says coach Scott Reeves. “Defensively, we’ve got to tighten up our team defence and our on-the-ball defence.”

University of Northern British Columbia coach Sergey Shchepotkin says his Timberwolves will start a line-up featuring 6-3 Greece-born post Vasiliki Louka, 6-1 Jasprit Nijjar, 5-9 forward Maria Mongomo Cavallo, who toiled on the under-16 and under-20 Spanish national teams, point guard Hannah Pudlas and off-guard Kylie Pozniak.

“It’s all about experience and mental toughness,” says Shchepotkin, noting that his troops have the classic hallmarks of youth: fabulous on one possession, less so on the next. “It’s up and down.”

Former Queen’s Gaels all-star Claire Meadows replaced 21-year coaching icon Heather Semeniuk at the helm of the UBC-Okanagan Heat and used the preseason to experiment and shake out “who can play where and who can do what.” Guard Emily Kanester, returning from a year off rehabilitating her ankle, will be “integral to our offence,” says Meadows. “She’s our best three-point shooter.” Claire Elliott will run the point, and join wing Olivia Johnson, forward Kayla McFadden and rookie post Jordan Korol in the starting line-up.

“I think we can dictate tempo with our defence,” Meadows says. “We’re going to have to mix up our defence a lot but the more pressure we can apply, that’s going to free us up a little bit on offence and utilize our transition game more.”

Canadian junior women’s team performance analyst and McMaster assistant Nathan McKibbon assumed the helm at Mount Royal when Len Harvey bailed for native Nova Scotia. As many as nine different Cougars garnered starts in the preseason, including Saint Mary’s transfer Becky Nash and Calgary rookie Michelle Tiffany.

Veterans most likely to become starters include forward Melissa Moore and guard Angela Driscoll but clearly, experimentation will be the norm at Mount Royal as McKibbon becomes familiar with the team’s capabilities. “We’ve shown that we can perform. It’s just making sure that those little periods turn into longer periods and then hopefully put together a full 40 minutes,” he says.

Canada West Men’s Basketball Preview 2015-16

Screen Shot 2015-11-04 at 2.54.26 PMLast week I gave my own season preview for each of the TRU basketball teams. This week I received the season preview for all of Canada West which shows exactly where TRU stacks up against the rest of their competition.

The article, as well as any info you may need to find on Canada West basketball can be found on the Canada West website

CIS basketball preview: Canada West Men

Ain’t that a rule in Canada West?

By Wayne Kondro
Special to CIS

It’s the Canada West Universities Athletic Association, so it’s safe to say that things are in a state of flux.

Every year or so, they add a team, or two. Sometimes, they even lose a team, as when Simon Fraser decided it was too good for Canada and bolted for a creature called the Great Northwest Athletic Conference (an NCAA Division 2 school, which is not to be confused with NAIA’s Pacific Northwest Athletic or PAC West conferences, with which the Clan were once affiliated, before their members began reclassifying and realigning and SFU decided that Canada wasn’t so bad, in periodic doses. … well, you get the picture).

Meanwhile, good old CanWest kept adding members –- four in the last four years alone, bumping the membership up to 17 –- which, of course, necessitated rejigging the regular season schedule and the postseason playoff format.

This year, they’ll use the same mind-boggling playoff system, seeding teams by finish in either the Pioneer or Explorer division and ignoring all manner of rational comparators of strength, such as an RPI. Next year, they’ll realign the conference again, organizing themselves into something called geographical pods, and play a schedule in which some historical rivals will only visit once every four years. Coaches will sigh and steam about the recruiting consequences, while generally conceding that things are simply incoherent. Folks around the country will again drop their jaws in utter wonder.

Compounding the chaos this campaign is the fact that over half of last year’s all-stars have graduated, as have a passel of fifth-year seniors at most institutions, so mutability will again be the order of day for rosters, which somehow seems entirely apropos and consistent with the frontier spirit of the west.

U.B.C., of course, will be immune to the fluidity, having successfully bid to host the 54th annual Canadian Interuniversity Sport championship next March.

As a consequence, they’ll gain an automatic berth in the draw, which provides Thunderbirds coach Kevin Hanson the luxury of treating the entire season as a practice session. His troops could even finish 0-20 and still qualify, though if that were to occur, they’d probably be talking the affable Hanson out of the trees.

But it’s downright unlikely such drastic action will be required given that Hanson has a line-up which features swingman Jordan Jensen-Whyte and German-born point guard Philip Jalalpoor, along with forwards Conor Morgan, David Wagner and Will Ondrik. A deep bench includes Simon Fraser transfer Patrick Simon, backup point guard and Tacoma, Washington-native A.J. Holloway, along with 6-3 freshman gunner Taylor Browne and Australian forward Dominic Gilbert. That’s more than enough to yield the T-Birds a good seed at nationals.

“It’s all going to depend on how our new guys fit in. We’re sort of six and six, six veterans and six new guys, and we’ll see how quickly we can assimilate them into our philosophy and our systems,” says Hanson.

The general consensus among coaches is that Saskatchewan is the primary contender for one of CanWest’s two guaranteed berths. But both fifth-year forward Matt Forbes and 6-6 Shane Osayande have been sidelined indefinitely by foot injuries, so Huskies coach Barry Rawlyk has experimented with his front-court line-up, alternately starting Shane Lathan, Mack Burns, Trevor Severinski and Evan Ostertag. Rawlyk has consistently started two rookies in the backcourt, combo guards Chan De Ciman from Regina Leboldus and Jauquin Bennett-Boire from Saskatoon Yale.

The return of Forbes and Osayande “would make a significant difference for us, that’s for sure,” says Rawlyk. “We just have to find different ways to play the game. When you’re dealing with a younger line-up, you’ve got a lot of inconsistency with what you’re doing. When we’re good, we’re very good. And when we’re bad, we’re very bad.”

Ain’t that a rule.

Personable Calgary coach Dan Vanhooren hopes University of Nebraska-Kearney transfer Thomas Cooper keeps him smiling on the sidelines after the graduation of first-team all-star point guard Jarred Ogungbemi-Jackson. Either Winnipeg freshman Torrez McKoy or 5-11 David Kapinga will man the point, with Cooper, Vanier College product Johny Verrone or Australian-born Josh Owen-Thomas on the wings, and Dallas Karch or German giant Lars Schlueter in the blocks, depending on whether Vanhooren wants to play big or small.

Ironically, Ogungbemi-Jackson’s absence is opening new possibilities for the Dinos, Vanhooren says. “It changes how we play. In a lot of ways, it benefits other players. Our whole game was focused around him and everybody’s defenses were focused around him. Jarred drew a lot of attention in both directions. Now, I think we’re actually a little harder to play against because the ball is spread around more.”

The Regina Cougars should be a factor behind the brothers Tull, 6-4 Brandon and 6-4 third-team all-star Jonathan, third-year Barcelona, Spain-born point guard Alex Igual, and forwards Travis Sylvestre and 6-7 Will Tallman. Off the bench comes such options as former Fraser Valley guard Aaron McGowan and commencing in January, 6-11 Bronx-born post Rawane ‘Pops’ Ndiaye, who toiled two years at Indian Hills Community College in Iowa and one year for the University of Tennessee Volunteers.

“We’re skilled in the open floor,” says head coach Steve Burrows. “We got some guys that when we get out and we’re running and we’re pushing the ball and we’re pushing tempo, we can score the ball in bunches. … But if you want to be able to compete with the powers around the country, you have to be able to defend and you have to be able to score in the quarter-court, and be disciplined on both sides of the ball.”

Alberta graduated four starters, including their entire backcourt, among them first-team all-star Joel Friesen. But the returnees include second-teamer Mamadou Gueye, a member of the FISU team that finished 7th in Gwangju, South Korea. Golden Bears coach Barnaby Craddock hopes to plug the holes with oft-injured post Sebastien Denault, along with redshirt and 6-8 Toronto product Brody Clarke, who toiled for the junior national team that finished 5th at the Worlds in Heraklion, Greece.

As for the backcourt, Craddock will face the coaching nightmare of starting a rarely-used off-guard, Lyndon Annetts, and nothing less than an 18-year-old rookie, 5-8 Nevada product Colby Jackson, at the point. “I hope we can find our way into the playoffs by the end of the year,” he says. “We just have to hold our heads above water in the first semester.”

Without All-Canadian first-team post Chris McLaughlin to patrol the lanes and savvy playmaker Marcus Tibbs to run the show, Victoria will likely start a line-up featuring some mix of forwards Mack Roth, Justin Kinnear, Grant Sitton and Hayden Lejeune, along with guards Reiner Theil, Hassan Abdullahi and Brandon Dunlop, who returns to the line-up after a few years away from the program. Among impact recruits is Joshua Charles, a Cowichan product who toiled four consecutive years with provincial midget and juvenile units.

Still, highly-respected coach Craig Beaucamp believes his Vikes can establish an inside presence. “I like the fact that we can play bigger. So one of the things that we’ve been doing a lot of in the last few games is we’re switching a lot of things, switching a lot of ball screens, and just kind of able to eliminate some penetration. We’ve got a lot of guys who are 6-4 or 6-5, so we have the luxury to offset a lack of quickness and utilize that length.”

Although 6-10 post Brent Watkins suffered a pair of broken legs and various injuries to his head and torso in a car accident while travelling from his home in California to Lethbridge in the summer, and is indefinitely lost to the Pronghorns, they should remain in the hunt with a seasoned line-up that includes Fresno City College transfer point guard Dejon Burdeaux, Australian-born forward Brandon Brine, guards Jared Baker and Rob Olsen, and Lethbridge College transfer Christopher Maughan. Among other recruits expected to contribute are 6-9 California-born post Carl Hoffman and another Lethbridge College product, Will Hickey.

“We can score and we know we can score,” says coach Mike Hansen. “The key for us is: can we keep the pace of the game up? Can we get the games into the high-80s and force teams to run with us? If we can maintain that tempo and not let teams take the air out of the ball on us, it’s going to be hard for teams to keep up with that much scoring.”

Manitoba snuck into the playoffs last season with a 9-11 record and hopes to better that performance with a line-up featuring Brett Jewell and Wyatt Anders in the paint, either Justus Alleyn or Washington, D.C. product Ilarion Bonhomme II (a transfer from Brandon who was the league’s rookie of the year in 2012) at the point, and A.J. Basi, Keith Omoerah or John Alexander on the wings.

“I like our mix,” says Bisons coach Kirby Schepp. “We got a decent crop of returning guys. … I’m pretty confident that we’re going to be solid defensively, that we’re going to be able to rebound and get stops when we need to. But it’s just a matter of if we can score at a high enough rate to compete with the best teams. So far, our scoring has been kind of inconsistent, but balanced, which is good.”

Winnipeg returns 6-7 second-team all-star Jelayne Pryce and preseason starters have included Ryan Oirbans, Denzel Lynch-Blair, William Sesay and Denzel Soliven. “Our front court is relatively experienced,” says Wesmen coach Mike Raimbault.

Brandon appears to have cleaned house, bringing in 11 newcomers. Only four faces return for the Bobcats, including Texas product D.J. Jordan, and guards Ryan Hawley and Denham Buchanan, along with Nevada-born wing Earl Thompson Jr. Among newcomers that started in the preseason are Thompson Rivers transfer Tony Grant, Fanshawe College transfer Chris Stanhope and Algonquin College transfer Esmat Atem.

Trinity Western reached into Sacramento, California-based “Christian” liberal arts NAIA school William Jessup University for coach Aaron Muhic as a replacement for Scott Allen. Thus far, Muhic has experimented with a “musical doors” starting line-up that has typically included swingman Kelvin Smith, 7-1 redshirt post Matt Hayashi, guard Matt Blackaby and Spokane product Dean Richey at the point.

It’s critical “that our guys buy in and learn how to grow from failure and come to compete, consistently,” says Muhic, who notes the game played under FIBA rules “is so much faster” than those used in America.

Now, that ain’t a bad rule.

Meanwhile, over in the six-team Explorer division, where teams play one another four times, it’s expected to be a five-team battle for the three available playoff spots.

Thompson Rivers returns first-team all-star Josh Wolfram, a member of the FISU team, point guard Reese Pribilsky, Ukrainian import forward Volodymyr Iegorov, California-born guard Albert Medrano, as well as wings Gerard Gore and Luke Morris. Among promising recruits are Kelowna guard Jeff Tubbs.

Wolfpack coach Scott Clark, though, disavows the favorite tag. “Depth isn’t a strong suit,” he says, adding that areas needing improvement are glaringly obvious. “If we stay pat where we’re at, we’ll be good enough to get beat.”

If that ain’t a rule, it should be.

The Fraser Valley Cascades return third-team all-star Kevon Parchment, along with starting point guard Manny Dulay. Among those receiving major minutes in the preseason have been University of Victoria transfer Vijay Dhillon, Douglas College transfer Navjot Bains, and a pair of 6-6 California import forwards, Nate Brown from Porterville College and Mark Johnson from the College of the Desert in Palm Desert.

University of Northern British Columbia 2nd-team all-star and leading scorer Franco Kouagnia took his talents to the Swedish pro league but the Timberwolves will still be a factor with a solid backcourt in the form of point guard Billy Cheng and off-guard Rhys Elliott. Up front, the Wolves will use some combination of Colin Plumb, Vaggelis Loukas and Austin Chandler, while Marcus MacKay or any number of other options will man the wing.

“We’re a team that depends on ball movement and getting shifts from side to side,” says Timberwolves coach Todd Jordan. Things get trickier “when the ball sticks. We’re not a very good isolation team.”

The MacEwan Griffins were remarkably competitive in their inaugural CIS campaign and having been baptized by fire, will look to make a run at the playoffs behind third-team all-star Denzel James, forwards Keith Gerdes and Ryan May, along with a pack of recruits including American junior college point guard Thadius Galvez and Alberta colleges all-star Ryan Coleman.

“We took our lumps and learned from them and moved on and improved,” says Griffins coach Eric Magdanz. “The big thing for us this year is to not have any regression in our development. … We’re smaller than a traditional Canada West team. We can’t hide that. But I really like the way that all of our forwards can stretch the floor.”

UBC-Okanagan Heat coach Pete Guarasci lost 6-4 forward David Manshreck to a concussion until at least Christmas (and he may even redshirt). The loss of the team’s leading scorer and rebounder leaves Guarasci to cobble together a line-up that includes guard Randall Mosca and Mitchell Goodwin, post Dean Johnston, and two of a half dozen other options, depending on who delivers in practice.

“I think we’ll be better,” says Guarasci, a former member of the national senior team. “You just go through so many first-year pains. We’re still doing that at times. But we’re a little bit calmer. Everyone’s got a little more experience. We’ve got about five second-year kids and it’s getting to the point where this year or next year, a few of them need to make a breakthrough here and show that they deserve to be in the CIS.”

Mount Royal coach Marc Dobell expects to start 6-8 rookie Brett Layton in the post, once he’s recovered from an ankle injury, along with some combination of point guard Derek Wolf, veterans Ray Goff, James Lefebvre and Noah Lewis, Glen Yang, or any one of a half-dozen recruits, which include 6-9 Australian post Ty Cuperus.

“I like our potential but we’re young and we definitely look young sometimes,” says Dobell. “We’re trying to find some consistency and with so many new guys, just trying to have them understand what we’re trying to do within our program, and how we want to play.”

Ain’t that always a rule?

TRU Women’s Basketball Preview

2015-16 team picture, courtesy TRU

2015-16 team picture, courtesy TRU

The TRU women’s basketball program has done anything but mirror the men’s program over the offseason and though the 2015-16 preseason.

For starters, they only graduated one player last year–Jorri Duxbury. Duxbury was a fantastic two-way player and a true leader for a team that finished atop the Explorer Division with an 18-2 record. Ultimately the ‘Pack bowed out of the playoffs in a first round cross-divisional showdown with the University of Victoria Vikes.

The torch has now been passed to last year’s two ‘super-rookies’, Michelle Bos and Emma Piggin.

Bos was third in Canada West in rebounding with 11.2 per game while Piggin represented Canada at the FIBA U-19 Women’s World Championships over the summer. Both girls had remarkable impacts on their new club last year and will now have some CIS experience to ride into their sophomore seasons.

Veterans Sarah Malate and Taysia Worsfold will be back with something to prove in their final seasons in WolfPack colours. At 6’2″, WolfPack centre Kassie Colonna is one of the most dominant at her position in Canada West while Worsfold is perhaps the most well-rounded player on this roster. Malate will look to slide into an expanded role this season with her prolific three-point shooting.

The ‘Pack have added four new faces to the roster:

Leilani Carney (5’8”, guard, Burnaby, BC/St. Thomas More Secondary),

Chelsey Hoey (5’11”, guard, Parksville, BC/Ballenas Secondary),

Maddie Neumann (5’7”, guard, Calgary, AB/Henry Wisewood Secondary-IMG Academy, Florida),

Cassandra Rerick (5’4” guard, Prince George, BC/Duchess Park Secondary-UNBC)

How much Head Coach Scott Reeves decides to use his rookies will be uncovered as the season progresses.

After a subpar 4-5 preseason, the WolfPack women will accompany the men’s team up to Prince George this weekend (Nov. 6 and 7) to take on the UNBC Timberwolves in their season opener. The will host their home opener on November 20th at the Tournament Capital Centre and the pressure will be on to repeat the success of last season, if not supersede it.

For more information on the WolfPack, head over to their website.

TRU Men’s Basketball 2015-16

wolfie

Josh Wolfram, courtesy TRU

The TRU men’s basketball program experienced somewhat of an overhaul in the offseason, only returning 4 players from last year’s team that finished 3rd in the Pioneer’s division of Canada West with an 11-9 record.

One of those four players is Kamloops-born standout, Josh Wolfram, who will be leading a very young team alongside fellow fifth-year player, Reese Pribilsky.

At 6’11”, Wolfram averaged a double-double for the WolfPack last season and will look to continue dominating in an expanded role with the team this season.

“We’re a very talented team. When you look at our starting five I think we’re as talented as any other team in Canada West. We have a lot of young guys so our learning curve is going to be steep, but I think as we get better we’re going to start getting better a lot quicker. Come March–playoff time–I think we’ll be a very good team,” said Wolfram.

Being a Kamloops kid, Wolfram has seen and experienced the growth of basketball in his hometown over the past few years. With two other Kamloops-born players now on the team, Evan Helgason and Evan Cave, Wolfram has a chance to mentor some young players who he can pass to Kamloops basketball torch to after this season.

“It’s always great to see Kamloops producing more and more basketball talent,” said Wolfram.

“If you look back before me and Kelly [Olynyk], there’s always been talent coming out of here so it’s great to see that trend continuing.”

The new-look WolfPack are coming off an undefeated preseason and will now set their sights on meaningful Canada West action. Their season gets underway November 6th in Prince George, B.C. against the University of Northern B.C. Timberwolves.

The ‘Pack will host their home opener Friday, November 20th against the MacEwan University Griffins.

For the full schedule and results, head to the WolfPack website

Ryan Porter Profile

Porter (right) receiving Basketball Alumni Leadership Award from Athletics Director Ken Olynyk in 2012-13 (Andrew Snucins photo)

Porter (right) receiving Basketball Alumni Leadership Award from Athletics Director Ken Olynyk in 2012-13 (Andrew Snucins photo)

I mentioned in an earlier post that Ryan Porter is arguably the most decorated player to have put on a TRU or UCC jersey, so most people may find it interesting that the 6’7″, former CCAA Player of the Year had no intention of ever taking to the hardcourt in Kamloops.

Porter was born and raised in Cranbrook, B.C. and moved to Kamloops after graduating from high school.

“I started playing in grade ten. I tried out for the junior high team just because I was tall and my coach at the time kept me only because I was tall,” said Porter.

“I wasn’t very good. I could rebound and block people basically, but not much else.”

Having also played soccer throughout high school, Porter decided basketball was a better fit due to his height and the fact that he had good friends on the team.

Porter’s high school team, the Mount Baker Trojans, had a lot of success, making it to the provincial championship tournament both years that he played. He even led the tournament in rebounding in his final year.

Porter was recruited by two schools in Calgary, Mount Royal University and SAIT out of high school but chose Kamloops instead.

“I loved basketball but I had no ambition to play college at the time,” said Porter.

Porter was playing in a local men’s league a year after making the move to Kamloops when his teammates suggested he try out for the UCC Sun Demons.

“A couple ex-college players from town told me that I should go try out for the college team and I said ‘I don’t know if i would make it’, and they said ‘no, you need to go try out. So I ended up trying out and making it and I just fell in love with it.”

“I had an amazing coach [Nevin Gleddie] who helped me learn the game and grow in the game–I met a lot of good friends and it was all awesome from there,” said Porter.

Porter’s growth as a player was phenomenal. He became the backbone of a successful run for the UCC Sun Demons, being named and All-Canadian twice (top 10 college player in Canada), a two-time Academic All-Canadian (named a First-Team All-Star and hold a 3.67 GPA), and in his final year a College Player of the Year award. Not bad for a gangly kid who started out as a soccer player.

The very next season after playing out his eligibility at UCC, Porter took on a head coaching position with the Sa-Hali Sabres senior boys basketball team in Kamloops–a ‘Bad News Bears’ team that he would lead to an Okanagan championship tournament before losing their star player to injury, deflating their season.

“My very first coaching experience was a whirlwind of direction and experiences, but it made me fall in love with it because it allowed me to keep my competitive sporting nature alive now that my sporting days are done,” said Porter.

Now a P.E. teacher at Westsyde Secondary School in Kamloops, Porter has continued to be a role model in the local basketball community. He coaches a perennially successful senior boys team at Westsyde, and also participates in TRU and Westsyde alumni tournaments.

I had the pleasure of playing high school basketball under Porter’s direction and his combination of basketball I.Q. and an ability to relay that information to players has sparked a true passion for the game in myself, and in many other players and former players of his. One main success story being Joe Davis, a player who Porter coached through the rankings at Westsyde who went on to receive a basketball scholarship to the TRU program.

Undoubtedly one of, if not the greatest players in UCC/TRU basketball history, Porter has cemented himself as both a legendary player and builder in the Kamloops basketball community.