Times Colonist

U-19 hoops champs team of year

- LORI EWING

TORONTO — It was the perfect mix of talent and togetherne­ss. And over one remarkable week last summer in Cairo, 12 teenagers did something no Canadian team had ever accomplish­ed — claim gold on basketball’s world stage.

Canada captured the FIBA U-19 Basketball World Cup title in July, the country’s first gold in the sport at any world or Olympic event, stunning the mighty Americans in the semifinals before steamrolli­ng Italy in the final.

They were honoured for their historic performanc­e by being voted the Canadian Press Team of the Year for 2017.

“From one to 12, what an incredible group of young kids we had, who did an incredible job of representi­ng our country,” said coach Roy Rana.

The team picked up 17 of 63 votes (27 per cent) in an online poll of broadcaste­rs and sports editors from across the country. MLS Cup champions Toronto FC and Brad Gushue’s world champion curling rink tied for second with 10 votes (16 per cent).

No one could have predicted how the young basketball team’s dramatic week would unfold, or penned a better storybook ending.

“Came out of nowhere,” said Chris Bury, program director for CJAD 800 in Montreal. “Surprised and inspired the nation.”

“Unexpected. Beating the U.S. is the cherry on top,” wrote Mackenzie Liddell, Yahoo Canada sports editor.

Set against a tense backdrop of security concerns in Cairo — sequestere­d in their hotel, the Canadians ventured out just once, on their day off, in a memorable visit to the Pyramids — the Canadians would overpower Mali and Japan by a combined 191-117 in the preliminar­y round.

But they dropped a 78-73 decision to Spain that slotted them second in Group C of the 16-country tournament, setting them on a collision course with the topranked Americans.

It was understood at that moment, but never spoken aloud, Rana said, that their path to the gold-medal game would go through the U.S. Canada’s kiss of death, many probably thought. The best they would likely play for was bronze.

But the Canadians defeated France 73-67 in the quarter-finals. And then, in what will go down as a landmark moment in Canada’s basketball history, the team upset an American squad coached by Kentucky’s John Calipari 99-87 in the semis.

“After that game we knew we were going to win,” said team captain Lindell Wigginton. “We felt like nobody could stop us after that.”

The 19-year-old from Dartmouth, N.S., was right. The Italians didn’t stand a chance in the final. Canada won 79-60 for gold.

“To beat a really good France team, and then have this magical run where we upset the U.S. and won the world championsh­ip, was incredible, just absolutely magical,” Rana said. “It was just kind of the power of sport when teams start to gel at the right time and come together, and make sacrifices for each other.”

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