jonny three time wrote:
Sure, but how do you make the argument for that? Canada isn't at some inherent disadvantage because of our geography or political structure or anything like that. Our disadvantage is simply an odd imbalance in our current talent makeup. For a country that has around 10 NBA players right now, we should have huge talent pool of "not quite" NBA talents to choose from. We don't though and it really comes down to chance more than some disadvantage we will always have.
Hopefully Team Canada brass can get the Rautins, Shepperd, Hanlan types to still show for those qualifiers despite not being on the main team and get guys like Kris Joseph back into the fold. Our 2nd tier talent isn't that bad, but we need everyone who's of that caliber to show up or its slim pickings for an entire rotation.
I think Canada is at an inherent disadvantage for linguistic, cultural, and geographic reasons, and that it is not an odd imbalance in our current talent makeup. Most of our NBA players are fringe NBA players. We had only one NBA starter last season and arguably three rotation guys (Olynyk, Thompson, and Joseph (and even he was the 3rd PG)). The vast majority of our NBA guys are fringe NBA guys. Of the nine NBA guys on our FIBA roster, six were fringe - Sacre, Nicholson, Bennett, Ejim, Powell, and Stauskas.
Guys of that caliber face a difficult decision - be the 10th to 15th guy on an NBA roster, or play in a different league. The decision is influenced in part by language, culture, and geography. A guy from Europe, all else equal, is less likely to want to shuttle between Dallas and Bakersfield, living in a different culture thousands of miles from home, instead of playing in a top Euro league closer to home. For a guy like Powell, the equation is different. He has been in the US since he was 15, has no language or culture issues to deal with, and is a short flight from his family in Boston and Toronto.
I think the European and Latin American countries have their share of Powell- and Nicholson-like players, but they are more likely to be in non-NBA leagues.
You see the same thing in hockey - a lot of Euros that are good enough to be 4th line NHLers prefer to play in leagues closer to home.
In any case, while I think all that is true, it need not have been part of Canada's lobbying effort against the new system. Canada should have simply pointed out that the new system will reduce the talent available at the qualifying tourney and therefore the World Cup and perhaps the Olympics. It is bad for FIBA as a whole.