CAMPBELL NAMED TO HONEY BADGERS' ROSTER FOR UPCOMING BCLA WINDOW

CEBL Staff • December 6, 2022

The Canadian Elite Basketball League (CEBL) announced the Brampton Honey Badgers roster Tuesday ahead of the first window of the Basketball Champions League Americas (BCLA) group stage action. The CEBL Champion Honey Badgers are scheduled to begin play Friday, December 9 they meet host Libertadores de Queretaro of Mexico in Queretaro City at 9 p.m. Eastern time. They’ll on Nicaraguan champions Real Estelí on December 10 at 1 p.m. Eastern time at the same venue. 


The BCLA brings together 12 teams representing seven countries from South and Central America along with Canada’s national champion competing over the course of four months to win a berth in the 2024 FIBA Intercontinental Cup, one of professional basketball’s most prestigious international competitions. 


Representing the Brampton Honey Badgers is a roster that is
comprised of seven Canadians and four international players. All seven Canadians played on a CEBL roster this past season. Notable names include 2021 All-CEBL guard and Brampton native Alex Campbell (Vancouver Bandits) and Kitchener Ont. native Murphy Burnatowski (Vancouver Bandits) who were both part of the Edmonton Stingers BCLA roster this past season, 6-foot-11 centre Jordy Tshimanga (Saskatchewan Rattlers), who averaged a team high 7.9 rebounds this past season and has NBA G League experience (four games played for the Cleveland Charge and Iowa 38 games played for Iowa Wolves).


The roster also includes Canadian Senior Men’s National Team members Javhon Blair (Newfoundland Growlers) and Jaylen Babb-Harrision (Niagara River Lions). Brampton native Blair played in the recent FIBA World Cup Qualifiers in Edmonton, AB where he scored 10 points in 14 minutes played against Panama to help the national team stay unbeaten (10-0) in the competition. Babb-Harrison, who ranked third in the CEBL in 3-point percentage in 2022 (43.0%), played in the recent FIBA Americup competition where Canada finished fourth. Brampton native Sean Miller-Moore was also named to the Honey Badgers BCLA roster. He last played for the Guelph Nighthawks, where he averaged a team high field goal percentage of 55.5.


The international players include Dominican Republic Senior Men’s National team member and Dominican/American guard Gelvis Solano, who has played 192 games as a professional across seven countries, Texas native Josh Ibarra, who averaged 12.1 points and 8.6 rebounds in 21 games played with Plateros De Fresnillo of the LNBP in Mexico in 2022-23, Jordan Williams, who averaged 19 points, 2.5 assists and 1.4 steals in 31 games played with Mineros de Zacatecas of the LNBP in 2022-23, and Bahamian forward David Nesbitt, who averaged 9.5 points and 5.5 rebounds in 233 games across Argentina, Brazil, and Kazakhistan. 


The full roster can be found 
here.


Similar to last year, the fourth season of the BCLA will consist of 12 teams from seven countries spread across four groups. The teams will play three games against each opponent in their group starting December 9. The remaining nine clubs are CR Flamengo, Minas, and Franca from Brazil, Instituto, Obras Basket, and A.A. Quimsa from Argentina, Club Biguá and Club Penarol from Uruguay, and Basket UdeC from Chile. At the end of the group stage the top two ranked teams in each group will advance into the quarterfinals and play in a best-of-three game series to determine the four teams that will qualify for the “Final 4”. The Final 4 will be played as single-elimination semifinals with winners advancing to the championship game and the semifinal losers playing for third place. The 2023 BCLA champion will earn a spot into the 2024 FIBA Intercontinental Cup.
The Basketball Champions League Americas (BCLA) is the best continental league in the Americas. It’s created through an innovative partnership between FIBA, federations and leagues with 12 teams competing from the continent.


All games will be live streamed internationally on CEBL’s OTT platform, 
CEBL+ and on the CEBL Mobile, the official app of the CEBL. The third window


The competition window hosted by Canada at the CAA Centre in Brampton and will begin February 7 when Brampton takes on Real Estelí. The two visiting teams, Real Estelí and Libertadores, will then face each other February 8, while the Honey Badgers play Libertadores on February 9. Fans are encouraged to take advantage of a 33% discount on game tickets as 3-game packs are now on sale for all three games. All tickets can be purchased via the link
here.


A league created by Canadians for Canadians with a mission to develop Canadian players, coaches, sports executives and referees, the CEBL boasts the highest percentage of Canadian players of any pro league in the country with 71 percent of its 2022 rosters being Canadian. Players bring experience from the NBA, NBA G League, top international pro leagues, the Canadian National team program, and top NCAA programs as well as U Sports. Nine players have moved from the CEBL into the NBA following a CEBL season, and 28 CEBL players attended NBA G League training camps during October. The CEBL season runs May through August.  More information about the CEBL is available at CEBL.ca and @cebleague on on 
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Vancouver emerged victorious over Montréal in a battle between the best of both conferences on Saturday (June 14) at Langley Events Centre. The Bandits stormed back from a 20-point deficit in the first half to earn their third straight victory. A timely 15-0 run in the fourth quarter propelled the Bandits to the comeback, featuring clutch shooting from Curtis Hollis, along with inside finishing from Mitch Creek and Shamar Givance. Vancouver head coach Kyle Julius said certain possessions in the third quarter set the tone for the comeback. “We just kept talking about chipping away and we talked a lot about the power of one possession and how it can change a game,” Julius said. Creek paced the Bandits’ attack with a game-high 30 points to go along with seven rebounds. Hollis added 18 points, including the game-winner. “I knew we had to get one more bucket. I knew the guys were helping off me all game, which I really don't know why, but I saw he helped off me, and Shamar made a great pass and I just had to make a shot,” Hollis said. James Karnik and Corey Davis Jr. also made their season debuts for Vancouver, adding nine points each. Julius said incorporating new faces mid-season can be a challenge. “The chemistry of a locker room is fragile. You build your offence around a particular group, you build your defense around a particular group, and when certain pieces change, it can affect your scheme. And so, yeah, you have to tweak things all week,” Julius said. Meanwhile, Montréal guard Tavian Dunn-Martin proved difficult to stop despite second-half struggles as a team. He netted 20 points with four threes on eight-of-13 shooting overall. “We settled for too many threes [in the second half]. We didn't attack the basket … didn't get to the line. Then they got out in transition and made shots, and we didn't,” Dunn-Martin said. Montréal seized control early on, shooting 70 per cent from the field in the first quarter and forcing the Bandits into catch-up mode. Alliance head coach Jermaine Small said his squad was outrebounded in the second half but expects to get better from the loss. “You have to understand that you've got to play a 40-minute game. We got off to a really good start [and] obviously we tapered off a little bit. But it's just a good lesson … basketball is a long game, so I'm not worried about it,” Small said. Montréal began the game on a 14-4 run that culminated in back-to-back threes from Anthony Walker and Quincy Guerrier. Creek showed off his rebounding ability on the offensive glass, keeping the Bandits in the contest with three putbacks. However, the Alliance offence was on fire in the opening 10 minutes. Montréal closed the quarter on a 13-3 run, highlighted by a pair of Michael Diggins Jr. slams and a deep trifecta from Dunn-Martin, to take a 32-15 lead into the second. Guerrier connected on a free throw and a spin layup to extend Montréal’s lead to 20 early in the second before Vancouver went on a quick run fueled by transition finishes to narrow the gap. However, the Alliance stayed hot with another deep triple from Dunn-Martin and a corner three from former Bandit Malcolm Duvivier. The red-hot Montréal offence cooled off to end the half and Vancouver took advantage, closing the deficit to single digits by halftime at 48-41 with a 9-2 run. The third quarter turned into a defensive battle, with neither team scoring more than 15 points. The Bandits fought back to tie the game for the first time since the opening tip, powered by an 11-2 run in which the Alliance didn’t connect on a field goal. However, long-range shooting put Montréal back in front with back-to-back threes from Guerrier and Dunn-Martin. The Alliance carried a 62-56 advantage into the fourth quarter. Dunn-Martin continued to showcase his range with another deep three early in the fourth to bring the Alliance lead back to double-digits. But the Bandits demonstrated their resilience with a massive 15-0 run that put the home squad in front for the first time all game. Alain Louis made some clutch trifectas ahead of the final stretch, but a Creek and-one put Vancouver ahead 80-77 with an 89-point Target Score. After Guerrier kicked off scoring in Target Score Time with a transition slam, Davis Jr. buried a three, Creek got the hoop and the harm, and Givance scored in transition to put Vancouver one point away from victory. Hollis connected on a catch-and-shoot from the wing to complete the comeback and improve the Bandits’ record to 8-1. Box Score https://www.cebl.ca/game?id=2600585
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