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  #1921  
Old Posted Nov 6, 2019, 6:07 PM
elly63 elly63 is online now
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Wow, didn't think I would find this

Video Link

University of Victoria (Eli Pasquale) vs Waterloo 1983

Love the clapping tradition

Last edited by elly63; Nov 6, 2019 at 6:17 PM.
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  #1922  
Old Posted Nov 6, 2019, 6:17 PM
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Originally Posted by elly63 View Post
Wow, didn't think I would find this


Video Link

University of Victoria (Eli Pasquale) vs Waterloo 1983

Love the clapping tradition
I remember that tradition quite vividly. I wonder if they still do it?

Also... CTV producing and showing Canadian sports!
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  #1923  
Old Posted Nov 6, 2019, 6:19 PM
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I remember that tradition quite vividly. I wonder if they still do it? Also... CTV producing and showing Canadian sports!
Yes, those were different days, and also a time when the CRTC also had a modicum of moral authority.

Last edited by elly63; Nov 6, 2019 at 6:36 PM.
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  #1924  
Old Posted Nov 6, 2019, 6:21 PM
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Unshakeably determined Eli Pasquale carried Canada to unmatched heights
Michael Grange Sportsnet.ca November 5, 2019

It was a hot summer day in Sudbury, Ont., and Eli Pasquale and his friends were doing what they always did: playing pick-up hoops in the gym at Lockerby Composite School.

There was a little extra spice in the scrimmages that day. Visiting from Sault Ste. Marie, Ont., was Dave Zanatta another high-end high school talent who had made the four-hour trip to find some competition.

After a couple of hours and many buckets of sweat, someone suggested heading to the lake for a swim. Pasquale went along, Zanatta stayed.

The group returned from their swim later in the afternoon to play some more and the rolled into the gym to find Zanatta – who went on to star at Lakehead University in Thunder Bay, finishing with a school-record 21 point per game average – still working on his game.

It was a moment that changed Pasquale’s life and arguably Canadian basketball.

“That was it, I said ‘never again’,” Pasquale recalled nearly 35 years after the fact when I interviewed him for the Steve Nash biography I co-wrote with Dave Feschuk.

“I made a decision at that point – I think in Grade 11 — that never again was I going to let anyone else play more hours than I do, and I don’t think many did, to be honest. Kids laugh, but they don’t realize it. I put in six to eight hours a day. That’s what I did in the summertime. There was no question, I put my time in.”

That laser focus and unshakeable determination helped forge one of the most remarkable careers any Canadian basketball player has ever had.

Pasquale, 59, died Monday in Victoria, B.C., after a lengthy battle with cancer.

“He was an athlete who brought passion to the gym, and nothing of any serious consequence has even been accomplished in life without passion and commitment,” Ken Shields, the former University of Victoria and national team head coach, said Tuesday.

His relationship with Pasquale spanned nearly 50 years, from when the skinny scrappy kid would attend his basketball camps at Laurentian University where Shields first coached to the very end this week in Victoria, when Pasquale passed away peacefully after a long battle with cancer.

“You never had to talk about quality with Eli. He brought his best to every practice, every scrimmage. It was the standard he set.

“There was absolutely no question in my mind that in today’s world he would have been an NBA player,” said Shields. “Because of his athletic ability and his will – but international players didn’t have the same respect they do today.”

Pasquale left Sudbury to play for Shields at the University of Victoria, where he was the starting point guard on five consecutive national championship teams from 1980-84.

The Vikings were to Canadian basketball at the time what Carleton is now. They eventually won seven straight titles and were .500 in 14 exhibition games against D1 opponents – all on the road. Four UVic players were on the national team roster when Canada finished fourth at the 1984 Olympics in Los Angeles.

He was also the starting point guard for a decade for Jack Donahue on the best men’s national teams Canada has ever had, piloting a run that included a gold medal at the World University Games in Edmonton in 1983, which featured a landmark win over a U.S. team that had Hall of Famers Charles Barkley, Karl Malone and a handful of others who had notable NBA careers. Pasquale’s national team career began as a reserve on a team that finished sixth at the world championships in 1982 before he took over as the starter and guided the men’s team to the fourth-place finish in Los Angeles, an eighth-place finish at the world championships in 1986 and a sixth-place performance at the 1988 Olympics in South Korea.

The common wisdom is that had Pasquale not broken his leg in the lead-up to qualifying for the 1992 Olympics in Spain, Canada would have made it to three straight Olympic tournaments. The Canadian men’s team has been to only one Olympics since 1988.

“We played nine years together in the backcourt,” said Jay Triano, the national team co-captain with Pasquale, former Canadian men’s team head coach and now the assistant coach with the Charlotte Hornets.

“And he was the guy. He was the head of the whole thing. He ran the offence and was just as good off the court with the way he trained and the way he challenged himself and challenged his teammates,” said Triano.

“… there was no way I’d have had the same career I did without Eli playing point guard.”

But his legacy lives on through the lives he touched after his competitive career was done.

Pasquale lived in Victoria after graduating from UVic and began running basketball camps all over the island.

One of his counsellors was a local teenager, Steve Nash, who was making a name for himself as perhaps the best basketball player in all of British Columbia in the late 1980s.

Pasquale still liked to be the last one to leave the gym, but in Nash he found someone who wanted to be there right along with him. The veteran international known for his ability to run a one-man press, so tireless was his defensive effort, would play endless games of 1-on-1 against the local high school phenom. Pasquale quickly recognized that Nash’s talent was even more considerable than his own.

Driving Nash home after one of their workouts, Pasquale passed on some advice that helped change the younger guard’s focus and altered the trajectory of his life.

Growing up in small-town, northern Ontario, the limits of the basketball universe seemed finite. Pasquale’s nearest rival, Zanatta, lived four hours down away along a two-lane northern highway.

When it was time to choose a university, he picked UVic because he’d known Ken Shields from his days in Sudbury.

His chief basketball ambition was to play for Canada because he saw the national team defeat the USSR at Maple Leaf Gardens in 1975, a game carried live on CBC, the first time a game featuring the national team had ever been broadcast nationally.

Pasquale watched the game – the CBC being one of the two channels he got on his television at home – and he made another promise to himself.

“For whatever reason, it just hit me; I want to go to the Olympics, I want to play for Canada. So that was the start of that,” he said.

But years later his message to Nash – who was already scrimmaging with the national team as they trained in Victoria ahead of the 1992 Games – was to aim higher.

“If you have any thoughts about wanting to make the NBA you have to decide at this moment,” were Pasquale’s words to Nash. “You have to decide now and figure out what you have to do and go for it.

“There is no guarantee it’s going to happen, but by not making those goals, you can almost guarantee it’s not going to happen.”

It was a radical notion at the time. Aiming to make the NBA from Victoria was like drawing a target on the moon from your backyard. As Nash’s well-known legend goes, the two-time MVP and eight-time all-star was lucky to get a single U.S. scholarship offer.

But Pasquale was channeling his own experience. He had some solid NBA opportunities after leaving UVic. His play at the World University Games opened some eyes and he was a fifth-round pick of the Seattle Supersonics in 1984 and was cut only after the team traded for veteran point guard Gerald Henderson. The following year he was in training camp with the Chicago Bulls, playing alongside Michael Jordan but was cut in favour of John Paxon.

“Michael Jordan didn’t need a point guard,” Pasquale said. “They needed a guy who could spot up and shoot.”

Pasquale returned to Victoria where he would run his camps and continue training for the national team, shuttling down to Seattle on weekends to play semi-professional senior men’s basketball, often alongside Triano.

But his words and influence weren’t lost on Nash.

“He was a really good player, very smart, very efficient, very competitive,” was Nash’s scouting report on his mentor, years later. “You could throw him in an NBA game and not miss a beat.”

Nash took Pasquale’s advice and forged the greatest basketball career any Canadian has ever had and likely ever will.

And in that sense, the choice Pasquale made as an unknown high schooler in Sudbury of all places – to aim high and never be outworked again – have reverberated throughout Canadian basketball history and will likely live on forever.

Pasquale is survived by his wife Karen, sons Isiah and Manny, brother Vito, sister Luciana and mother Adriana.

On Wednesday night at Scotiabank Arena, the Toronto Raptors will be celebrating “Canada Basketball night,” recognizing the remarkable strides a hockey-playing nation has made in one of the world’s most international sports.

On the floor will be Roy Rana, as assistant coach with the visiting Sacramento Kings, and Cory Joseph, the veteran point guard from Toronto. The Raptors are NBA champions and their head coach is the coach of the national team. They feature two Canadians on their roster.

Eli Pasquale played his best basketball at a time when the NBA was too distant to dream on, but deserves recognition as one of the greatest Canadians to have ever played the game James Naismith invented. It should begin with a lengthy ovation Wednesday night.
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  #1925  
Old Posted Nov 7, 2019, 5:56 PM
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Great post Elly thx.
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  #1926  
Old Posted Nov 12, 2019, 4:44 PM
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Pretty close game last night in L.A which gives me some hope about playing Kawhi at home.

Video Link

Last edited by TorontoDrew; Nov 19, 2019 at 4:01 PM.
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  #1927  
Old Posted Nov 12, 2019, 5:32 PM
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About as good an effort as you could hope for down 3 key players on a back-to-back.

Also gave rise to a fantastic nickname for Boucher... Block Quebecois!
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  #1928  
Old Posted Nov 15, 2019, 4:15 AM
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In Olympic qualifying Canada's women's national team destroys Cuba 110-53 in Edmonton. Canada is ranked #4 in the world, it's highest ranking ever.
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  #1929  
Old Posted Nov 19, 2019, 11:17 AM
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Last edited by Acajack; Nov 19, 2019 at 12:53 PM.
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  #1930  
Old Posted Nov 19, 2019, 4:03 PM
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Toronto records franchise-high 40 assists in 36-point win against Charlotte


Toronto guard Norman Powell protects the ball from Charlotte's Terry Rozier during the first half of the Raptors' 132-96 win against the Hornets on Monday. (Frank Gunn/The Canadian Press)


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  #1931  
Old Posted Nov 19, 2019, 4:31 PM
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Are they going to play at TD Place arena? Great location but I didnt know it was configured for basketball.
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  #1932  
Old Posted Nov 19, 2019, 4:35 PM
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I'm not really familiar with the lay of the land as it relates to the CEBL and the other basketball league out east. Are they actively competing against each other? Is there any possibility that they might merge into a unitary basketball equivalent of the CPL?
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  #1933  
Old Posted Nov 19, 2019, 4:37 PM
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Are they going to play at TD Place arena? Great location but I didnt know it was configured for basketball.
Any hockey arena can be. It just won't have the retractable seats at the ends of the courts you typically see in NBA arenas that also handle hockey.
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  #1934  
Old Posted Nov 19, 2019, 4:50 PM
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Are they going to play at TD Place arena? Great location but I didnt know it was configured for basketball.
I think that is where they will play.

I've seen the Harlem Globetrotters play there a few times.
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  #1935  
Old Posted Nov 19, 2019, 8:09 PM
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I'm not really familiar with the lay of the land as it relates to the CEBL and the other basketball league out east. Are they actively competing against each other? Is there any possibility that they might merge into a unitary basketball equivalent of the CPL?
Not directly - CEBL is spring/summer vs NBL being fall/winter (roughly). But the River Lions did leave the NBL to start the CEBL. No idea on merger likelihood
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  #1936  
Old Posted Nov 19, 2019, 8:14 PM
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Ottawa has seen a couple of pro and semi-pro basketball teams come and go over the years.
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  #1937  
Old Posted Nov 20, 2019, 4:51 PM
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Ottawa has seen a couple of pro and semi-pro basketball teams come and go over the years.
So did you pay for the naming rights for this new team, or what?
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  #1938  
Old Posted Nov 20, 2019, 5:47 PM
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So did you pay for the naming rights for this new team, or what?
LOL! Though the first thing that came to mind with the Casino du Lac-Leamy as a sponsor!
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  #1939  
Old Posted Nov 20, 2019, 5:48 PM
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Not directly - CEBL is spring/summer vs NBL being fall/winter (roughly). But the River Lions did leave the NBL to start the CEBL. No idea on merger likelihood
You're correct that they don't compete with each other directly but I likely echo many people who wish they'd just pool their resources and have 1 larger league. There's so much competition in pro sports. It's not optimal having pro basketball split 3 ways: NBL, CEBL, and NBA. Then we have U Sports on top of that.
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  #1940  
Old Posted Nov 20, 2019, 9:45 PM
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Had occasion to watch the 905 play Maine this morning. Tyler Ennis looked very capable after missing a year with a gruesome leg injury. Hope (and believe) that he'll be back in the NBA sooner rather than later. Hopefully it will be with the Raptors.
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