The Province

NBA players suit up for Canada

National men’s team to play warm-up games against China in B.C.

- JIM MORRIS

Managing a fluid roster is one of the challenges Canada’s national men’s team faces as it prepares for next year’s FIBA Basketball World Cup in China.

“This is something we are always going to face with our teams,” Rowan Barrett, assistant GM and executive vice-president of Canada Basketball’s senior men’s program, said Monday. “Different windows we are going to have different athletes.”

Barrett was in Vancouver to announce Canada will prepare for its next round of World Cup Americas qualifying with a pair of games against China in the Pacific Rim Basketball Classic. The teams will play June 22 at Rogers Arena in Vancouver and June 24 at the Save-OnFoods Memorial Centre in Victoria.

Facing China will allow Canada to find its legs before World Cup qualifying resumes with games against the Dominican Republic June 29 at Toronto’s Ricoh Coliseum and the U.S. Virgin Islands July 2 at Ottawa’s TD Place.

Canada Basketball also announced the list of 18 players invited to form the roster for the qualifying games. The list includes NBA players such as Kelly Olynyk of the Miami Heat and Tristan Thompson of the Cleveland Cavaliers, plus players from Europe and the NBA G League.

The most notable player not on the list is Andrew Wiggins, who was picked first overall in the 2014 NBA draft and went on to win rookie of the year with the Minnesota Timberwolv­es.

Barrett didn’t give a specific reason for Wiggins not being part of the group.

“His initial desire was to play,” he said. “I do think he had some circumstan­ces come up that are going to limit his ability to play for us in June.

“The door is open for September potentiall­y as well.”

Head coach Jay Triano downplayed Wiggins’ absence.

“My goal is to focus on players that are here,” he said in a telephone conference call.

“Guys are going to miss for different reasons.”

Barrett said the qualifying format being used for the World Cup affects the availabili­ty of players. He noted that Thompson, a six-foot-nine forward, is involved in the NBA final while guard Kevin Pangos’s team in Lithuania is also still playing.

“It can be challengin­g in terms of how you put your teams together,” he said. “It’s something all the

countries are dealing with. We have to navigate that and compete to win.

“That continuity that you hope for, that you want, most countries just aren’t going to have that. I think we are managing it well so far.”

Triano said the pool of talented players available to him “is deeper than it ever has been.”

“We have more Canadians playing overseas and in the NBA than we’ve ever had before,” he said. “That’s a thank you to the grassroots and what Canada Basketball has done and what the grassroots programs in Canada has done. I don’t see this pool is getting smaller.”

The games against China will help the team mesh.

“After only having a couple days of practice I think it will be just having guys become familiar with each other, re-introducin­g some of the NBA players to the FIBA rules and

the FIBA style of play,” Triano said.

“The biggest thing for us is to get our guys to compete and play together and understand each other

so when we go back to Toronto we are in great shape to play two games that are hugely important.”

Canada has a 3-1 record in Group

D of the American qualifiers, which also consists of the Bahamas, Dominican Republic and the U.S. Virgin Islands. Each team faces the other three teams on a home and away basis, with the top three teams from each group advancing to the second round.

Canada can secure first place in the group by beating the Dominican Republic by at least 12 points and scoring a win over the U.S. Virgin Islands.

The next round of qualifying continues with games in September, November and February 2019.

The FIBA Basketball World Cup will be played Aug. 31 to Sept. 15, 2019. It will be the largest edition of the tournament, with a record 32 participat­ing teams playing 92 games over 16 days.

The last time Canada qualified for the World Cup was 2010.

 ?? — THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Miami Heat centre Kelly Olynyk, left, is among the 18 Canadians invited to join the men’s national team for a pair of warm-up games against China in B.C. and the next round of World Cup qualifying games this summer in Toronto and Ottawa.
— THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Miami Heat centre Kelly Olynyk, left, is among the 18 Canadians invited to join the men’s national team for a pair of warm-up games against China in B.C. and the next round of World Cup qualifying games this summer in Toronto and Ottawa.

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