Cape Breton Post

‘IT’S HOW IT SHOULD BE’

NBL of Canada moves to just one division for upcoming season

- BY BRENDAN MCCARTHY SALT WIRE NETWORK brendan.mccarthy@thetelegra­m.com

NBL of Canada moves to just one division for upcoming season.

It has yet to be officially announced by the National Basketball League of Canada, but the league is going to a one division format.

The Cape Breton Highlander­s played in the five-team Atlantic Division last season. The Central division had five teams based in Ontario, as well as the expansion St. John’s Edge. The Sudbury Five will be joining the league this fall.

But while Sudbury has been added, the Niagara River Lions have left the NBL of Canada for the Canadian Elite Basketball League, which begins play next year. And plans to put a replacemen­t NBLC team in the Niagara region for 2018-19 haven’t been successful.

Left again with four franchises in Ontario, the league had three options:

• To go with different-sized divisions, one with four Ontario entries and one in the east with six teams

• Convince the Edge to remain in the Central in order to keep two five-team divisions

• Put everyone together in one 10-team entity

They’ve gone with the latter and Edge star guard Carl English, who is also the team’s interim general manager, thinks it’s the most sensible call.

For one thing, he believes it should lead to a better playoff competitio­n, in that the final should feature the two best teams regardless of their geographic location, not two divisional champs.

And for the Edge, whose road trips all involve a flight out of St. John’s, N.L., followed by a bus tour to various cities, the change in travel won’t be as significan­t as perhaps it will be for other teams.

“For us, travel is travel. The way it looks, we’ll probably make three road trips to Ontario and three to the Maritimes,” said English.

But he believes the biggest winners will be Edge supporters, who only saw St. John’s play six teams at Mile One Centre last season. The Island Storm, Saint John Riptide and Highlander­s didn’t travel here in 2017-18

“From the fans’ perspectiv­e, it’s better because they’ll get to see everyone,” said English. “If there’s a great player in KW (Kitchener-Waterloo), they’ll get to see them. If there’s a great player in Halifax, they’ll get to see them. They’ll have the chance to see everyone, and I think that’s kind of cool. “It’s how it should be.” With each team playing a 40-game schedule against nine opponents, the math doesn’t work as far as ensuring that every team will play the same number of games in each matchup.

“We’ll probably play two games extra against a couple of teams … something like that,” said English, who said a schedule is “really close” to being finalized.

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 ?? T.J. COLELLO/CAPE BRETON POST ?? Shane Osayande of the Cape Breton Highlander­s hangs from the rim after a dunk during the 2017-18 season. The National Basketball League of Canada is moving to just one division for the upcoming season.
T.J. COLELLO/CAPE BRETON POST Shane Osayande of the Cape Breton Highlander­s hangs from the rim after a dunk during the 2017-18 season. The National Basketball League of Canada is moving to just one division for the upcoming season.

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