By Eric Koreen, Postmedia News August 9, 2010

Two years ago, the Canadian national men’s basketball team was in disarray.
At a qualifying tournament in Athens for the 2008 Beijing Olympics, the team fell apart. Samuel Dalembert, a centre with the NBA’s Philadelphia 76ers and the Canadian team’s most recognizable player, was kicked off the squad when he butted heads with coach Leo Rautins. Canada also lost badly in the quarterfinals of the tournament, falling short of its goal.
Rautins’ job was on the line, and the core of that team was in question.
After a successful summer last year, with Canada qualifying for the coming world championship in Turkey, all of that has changed.
“I think these guys really do get along,” Rautins said Friday as he officially announced his 15-man roster.
“During the year they’re talking to each other, checking in on each other. They can’t wait to get together in the summer. We all felt it. From the minute we hit the floor the other night [at Toronto's Air Canada Centre], everybody was there.”
Of course, it is easy to talk about unity before the meaningful games are played, but the Canadian team goes into the lead-up to the world championship as a band of brothers. That stretch starts with a game against China on Tuesday at Rogers Arena, and then a pair of games Thursday and Friday in Toronto against France, a team Canada will face in group play in Turkey.
As the team speaks of unselfishness and togetherness, Rautins plans to enforce it. The coach spoke of the ideal of playing no one player more than 24 minutes in any game, taking advantage of Canada’s depth in the absence of star talent.
Point guard Jermaine Anderson understands why that can work now when it could not have in the past.
“I think we were immature,” Anderson said. “I think a lot of the times we might have used playing for Canada to get jobs in the fall. And now I feel like everybody is here for one common goal. I think now a lot of the guys are already assigned for the summer instead of using this to get a job. That’s changed.”
Said Rautins: “I think part of the reason these guys are in the situation they’re in is because of the time they spent here developing their games. We’ve had a lot of guys who have got very good pro contracts in Europe because of the exposure they got with us. There’s a loyalty that forms with that — that’s a give and take. You’re representing your country, but it’s become a huge benefit for you, as well.”
Indeed, the 13 players on the roster with professional contracts — Robert Sacre of North Vancouver and Kelly Olynyk of Kamloops are still in school at Gonzaga University — play in 11 different countries. Still, all the job security in the world will not help them in Turkey.
“A lot of the teams that you’ve seen before, a lot of the teams in Europe, they’ve been together for years, from the junior programs all the way up,” Miami Heat centre Joel Anthony said. “In the past, our national team hadn’t had that same opportunity. Now I’ve seen a lot of the same faces for my past four years of competing.”
Also on the roster are national team veterans Levon Kendall of Vancouver and Tyler Kepkay of North Vancouver.
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