Toronto Star

CARDIAC KIDS

Canadian women save their best for desperate times, like an 18-point deficit in the third quarter,

- Doug Smith Sports reporter

It might have been the game, the dramatic and electric and unexpected comeback, that propels Canada’s Olympic basketball team to unpreceden­ted heights.

It could be the win that pays gigantic dividends as the Rio 2016 tournament unfolds, the “holy smokes” moment of the players’ lives.

Down 18 points in the third quarter, unable to get untracked anywhere on the court, the Canadians came storming back, ultimately registerin­g a 71-67 win over 2015 European champion Serbia thanks to a series of late-game heroics that created as dramatic a basketball finish as any fan could want.

It was a trio of the Canadian youngsters — Nayo Raincock-Ekunwe, Miah-Marie Langlois and Kia Nurse — and one of the old hands, Kim Gaucher, who gave greater life to the team’s medal hopes and should pro- pel them deeper into the national consciousn­ess.

“When we play in desperatio­n mode, which we were playing in today, that’s when we’re really, really good,” Nurse said. “And that showed.”

It may not have been as emotionall­y draining as, say, the Canadian soc- cer team’s loss to the United States four years ago in London, but it could be equally important in turning this group into the country’s darlings as the Games roll on.

A Gaucher three-pointer from the corner, a Raincock-Ekunwe threepoint play, a Langlois dagger of a three with less than 10 seconds left and Nurse’s brilliance in a 25-point effort are the stuff on which reputation­s are built.

“We aren’t that used to being down, we’ve had a lot of wins over the last two summers and Lisa (Thomaidis, the team’s coach) told us we have to be conscious if we’re down, to just have extra energy and extra motivation, so that’s something we’re really conscious of on the bench.” There were indeed moments of desperatio­n for the Canadians, who could not solve Serbia at either end of the court for the first two and a half quarters.

Canada threw the ball all over the place — 19 turnovers in all; they couldn’t slow a perimeter-based offence, and they were dead in the water, down 18 points.

But Thomaidis found a smaller, quicker lineup that was effective and Canada bamboozled Serbia with fourth-quarter full-court pressure.

And then the big plays started coming in rapid succession in the final three minutes: Gaucher’s three and Raincock-Ekunwe’s rebound in traffic that became a three-point play to give Canada a lead. “You know what, my teammates just told me ‘Go out there and rebound. Own the boards,’ ” Raincock-Ekunwe said. “I just got in a good position and it just worked out perfectly.”

Then there was Nurse’s calm leadership all over the floor and, finally, Langlois’s game-sealer, her only basket of the day.

“I made the shot and I was thinking ‘Man, I gotta go back on defence,’ ” Langlois said.

“But then the buzzer went off and I look over at Kia, and Kia’s already screaming, everyone’s jumping up and down.”

The importance of the victory will become more apparent as the fivegame preliminar­y round grinds on. The top four teams in the group advance to the quarter-finals. Canada has a 2-0 record with games left against Senegal, the United States and Spain, which is exponentia­lly better than being 1-1.

“Regardless of anything with respect to the Olympics, to beat the European champions from last year is massive,” Thomaidis said. “Throw in the fact we did it at the Olympic Games and it’s huge for us.

“Really proud of this team.”

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 ?? FRANK GUNN/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Canada’s Kia Nurse, left, battles Serbia’s Sasa Cado for a loose ball. Nurse had 25 points in Canada’s come-from-behind win over the Serbs.
FRANK GUNN/THE CANADIAN PRESS Canada’s Kia Nurse, left, battles Serbia’s Sasa Cado for a loose ball. Nurse had 25 points in Canada’s come-from-behind win over the Serbs.
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