Kelly Olynyk's long road with Canadian basketball pays off with World Cup medal - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 12:12 PM | Calgary | -8.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

Kelly Olynyk's long road with Canadian basketball pays off with World Cup medal

Team captain Kelly Olynyk helped Canada win bronze at the FIBA World Cup.

Kamloops, B.C., star captained Canadian men's senior team to first medal at FIBA Basketball World Cup

Kelly Olynyk #13 of Canada poses with his bronze medal after the FIBA Basketball World Cup 3rd Place game victory over the United States at Mall of Asia Arena on September 10, 2023 in Manila, Philippines.
Kelly Olynyk of Kamloops, B.C., helped Canada to its first medal at the FIBA Basketball World Cup on Sunday. (Yong Teck Lim/Getty Images)

It's been a long haul for Kelly Olynykand Canada's senior men's basketball team.

This summer, the Kamloops, B.C., native and his Canadian teammatesenjoyed stopsin Iceland, Germany, Spain, Abu Dhabi, Indonesia and the Philippines, where they wonbronze at the FIBA Men's Basketball World Cup and earned a berth in the 2024 Olympic Games.

"It was a lot of miles and[was taxing] on your body, butin the end, it's worth it," Olynyk told CBC's Daybreak Kamloops from an airport as he was set to catch a flight to Japan en route to the U.S. to attend a friend's wedding.

Canada captured bronze after a 127118 overtime win over the U.S. in the bronze-medal game on Sunday. It was a particularly sweet victory for 32-year-old team captain Olynyk,whose commitment to the national team has never wavered despite a number of disappointing losses over the years.

"Just to get back on the world stage,not only for ourselves but as an inspiration for all the future generations ...it means a lot," Olynyk said.

"Hopefully, it has a bigger impact than we can even see at the moment."

'Whatever it takes'

Watching the game back in Kamloops were Olynyk'sfather,Ken, a longtime basketball coach,and mother, Arlene. The bronze-medalgame in Manila tipped off well after 1a.m. PT, and they were up in the wee hours of the morning to watch it live.

"It was ... very stressful," saidKen. "Arlene tends to start cleaning the house when the game gets really stressful, and I start yelling, and she tells me, 'Don't yell at the TV.'"

Three basketball players fight for a loose ball.
Prior to the bronze-medal game, Olynyk started every game for Canada at the FIBA World Cup, but gladly accepted coming off the bench against the U.S., father Ken says. (Yasuyoshi Chiba/AFP/Getty Images)

Olynykfinished the game with 11 points and nearly won it for Canada on the final play of regulation with a 30-footer that hit the back iron as time expired.

Ken says he replayed the shot over and over in his mind as any coach would.

"If that shot was an inch or two shorter, it was inbecause it came off the back rim and directly back towards him, which meant it was exactly on line and would have been in the basket," Ken said.

Olynykwasn't in the starting lineup for the bronze-medal game after starting every other game in the tournament. Ken says the coaching staff explained to him that the U.S. were planning to go with a smaller lineup, so theywanted the six-foot-11-inchOlynykto come off the bench.

"He said, 'Of course. Whatever it takes,'" Ken said of his son's reaction.

"He'saconsummate team person, and I really believe he contributed well in that game."

The medal isCanada's first on either the World Cup or Olympic stage since 1936, when Canada earned silver at the Berlin Games.

A man wearing a purple jersey holds a basketball away from a man wearing a blue jersey.
After his whirlwind summer, Olynyk, centre, is set to rejoin the NBA's Utah Jazz for the upcoming season. (Rick Bowmer/AP)

Following his whirlwind summer,Olynyk says he plans to take a bit of time off before reporting to training camp for the Utah Jazz. The NBA veteran will no doubt have his sights set on playing for Canada at the Summer Games in Paris.

Canada's success at the World Cup, he sayshopefully, will lead young Canadian basketballplayers to want to represent their country.

His advice to those younger players?

"Fall in love with the process," he said. "Ifyou love the game, it'll take you wherever you want to go."

With files from Daybreak Kamloops and The Canadian Press