Canada releases 2019 World Cup preliminary squad

2019-07-16T22:05:11+00:00 2019-08-05T18:08:14+00:00.

Antonis Stroggylakis

16/Jul/19 22:05

Eurohoops.net

A couple of players from European clubs are also included in the list.

By Eurohoops team/ info@eurohoops.net

The Canadian Basketball Federation announced a list of 29 players that have been invited to join the preliminary roster of the national team for the 2019 World Cup.

Among the players are former All-EuroLeague guard Kevin Pangos, Valencia forward Aaron Doornekamp, Zenit St. Petersburg guard Phil Scrubb plus Unics Kazan forward Melvin Ejim.

Greek-Canadian guard Naz Mitrou-Long has also been invited to the training camp. If the player makes the final cut for the World Cup, he will automatically become non-eligible to play for the Greek national team. He has been working towards getting a Greek passport.

Per the Canadian Federation:

Canada Basketball is pleased to announce the 29 athletes invited to attend the Senior Men’s National Team training camp ahead of the FIBA Basketball World Cup 2019.

“Being asked to represent your country is a tremendous honour and we’re excited about the group of athletes that we have invited to training camp next month in Toronto,” said Rowan Barrett, Canada Basketball General Manager, Men’s High Performance. “These athletes demonstrate the depth of talent we now have in our country, as we prepare to meet the challenge of the FIBA Basketball World Cup.

A finalized list of Senior Men’s National Team training camp attendees will be announced prior to the start of camp.

Canada will open exhibition play with a two-game series against Nigeria. The Mattamy Athletic Centre in Toronto will host Team Canada on Wednesday, August 7 at 7:00 p.m. ET before the team travels to Bell MTS Place in Winnipeg for a game on Friday, August 9 at 7:00 p.m. CT. Tickets for Toronto and Winnipeg are on sale now.

Following the Canadian exhibition games, Team Canada will travel to Australia for a five-game exhibition series against Australia (August 16-17), New Zealand (August 20-21) and the United States of America (August 26). Tickets for these games are on sale now from Ticketek.

Last month, Canada Basketball announced Nick Nurse as Head Coach of Canada’s Senior Men’s National Team ahead of the FIBA Basketball World Cup 2019.

Canada is heading back to the World Cup for the first time since the 2010 FIBA World Championship after finishing the FIBA Basketball World Cup Americas Qualifiers with a 10-2 record to lead Group F. One of the fastest rising basketball nations in the world, Canada’s depth was on display during the Americas Qualifiers as 36 different players represented their country over the course of the six competition windows to qualify for the World Cup.

The FIBA Basketball World Cup 2019 in China (Aug. 31-Sept. 15, 2019) will be the biggest edition of FIBA’s flagship event with a record 32 participating teams playing 92 games over 16 days.

Canada is in Group H for the FIBA Basketball World Cup 2019 and will face Australia (September 1), Lithuania (September 3) and Senegal (September 5) in the First Round. The top two teams from Group G (Dominican Republic, France, Germany and Jordan) and Group H will qualify for the Second Round and form Group L.

The results of the three games from the First Round carry over to the Second Round with every team playing against the two teams in their new group that they have not faced. The top two teams from each group will qualify for the Quarter-Finals.

Click here for additional details on the FIBA Basketball World Cup 2019 competition system.

For the first time, the FIBA Basketball World Cup will qualify seven teams directly for the following year’s Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games. Canada must finish either first or second in the Americas zone to earn a direct berth.

Name

Position

Height

Hometown

Previous / Current Club

Nickeil Alexander-Walker

Guard

6’5”

Toronto, ON New Orleans Pelicans
R.J. Barrett

Guard

6’7”

Mississauga, ON New York Knicks
Aaron Best

Guard

6’4”

Scarborough, ON Riesen Ludwigsburg (Germany)
Khem Birch

Centre

6’9”

Montreal, QC Orlando Magic
Chris Boucher

Centre

6’10”

Montreal, QC Toronto Raptors
Oshae Brissett

Forward

6’8”

Mississauga, ON Syracuse Orange (NCAA)
Dillon Brooks

Forward

6’7″

Mississauga, ON Memphis Grizzlies
Brandon Clarke

Centre

6’8”

Vancouver, BC Memphis Grizzlies
Aaron Doornekamp

Forward

6’7”

Napanee, ON Valencia Basket (Spain)
Luguentz Dort

Guard

6’4”

Montreal, QC Oklahoma City Thunder
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander

Guard

6’6”

Hamilton, ON Oklahoma City Thunder
Melvin Ejim

Forward

6’6″

Toronto, ON BC UNICS (Russia)
Brady Heslip

Guard

6’2”

Burlington, ON Istanbul BBSK (Turkey)
Cory Joseph

Guard

6’3″

Toronto, ON Sacramento Kings
Mfiondu Kabengele

Forward

6’10”

Burlington, ON Los Angeles Clippers
Naz Mitrou-Long

Guard

6’4”

Mississauga, ON Salt Lake City Stars (G League)
Trey Lyles

Forward

6’10”

Saskatoon, SK San Antonio Spurs
Jamal Murray

Guard

6’4”

Kitchener, ON Denver Nuggets
Andrew Nembhard

Guard

6’5”

Aurora, ON Florida Gators (NCAA)
Kelly Olynyk

Forward

7’0″

Kamloops, BC Miami Heat
Kevin Pangos

Guard

6’2”

Newmarket, ON FC Barcelona Basketball (Spain)
Dwight Powell

Forward

6’11”

Toronto, ON Dallas Mavericks
Phil Scrubb

Guard

6’4″

Richmond, BC Zenit Saint Petersburg (Russia)
Thomas Scrubb Forward

6’7”

Richmond, BC Openjobmetis Varese (Italy)
Marial Shayok

Forward

6’5”

Ottawa, ON Philadelphia 76ers
Andy Rautins

Guard

6’4”

Syracuse, NY Bahcesehir Koleji Istanbul (Turkey)
Nik Stauskas

Guard

6’6”

Mississauga, ON Cleveland Cavaliers
Tristan Thompson

Centre

6’10”

Brampton, ON Cleveland Cavaliers
Kyle Wiltjer

Forward

6’10”

Portland, OR Unicaja Malaga (Spain)

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