Vancouver urban Indigenous hoops teams win big at All Native Basketball Tournament - Action News
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British Columbia

Vancouver urban Indigenous hoops teams win big at All Native Basketball Tournament

The Burnaby Chiefs and All My Relations basketball teams left Metro Vancouver with dreams, and returned as All Native Basketball tournament champions in their divisions.

52 Indigenous teams across B.C. competed in the annual All Native Basketball tourney in Prince Rupert

The Burnaby Chiefs stayed in the winner's bracket and won the All Native Basketball tournament intermediate men's championship with an 81-70 victory over the Prince Rupert Cubs on April 9. (Amber Youngchief)

Kobe McKnight was living his dream of playing a championship game in the All Native Basketball tournamentwhen he realizedthe Burnaby Chiefs were about to win it.

With only a minute and 43 seconds left in the game against the Prince Rupert Cubs, the shooting guard sensed victory.

With his cousin playing for the Cubs checking him, McKnightfaked going right, crossed the ball to the left, and launched a three-point shot, the ball arcing in the air then sliding into the net.

"That's where I thought the game ended," McKnight said. "That's when it hit me that we are going to win."

Members of the Burnaby Chiefs have to either be working or going to school in order to be on the team, head coach Chris McKnight says. (Amber Youngchief)

The Chiefs pulled out a 81-70 final score to win the intermediate men's division championship, withMcKnightearning the tournament's most valuable playeraward and other high-scorer honours.

The achievementsweren't his alone, he says.

"All 10 of us accepted our roles, played smart and brought it to another level," McKnightsaid.

For the Burnaby Chiefs, thevictory was a fitting end for a squad that has largely been together since grade school: it was the first tournament in two years after the coronavirus pandemic forced play to be suspended, andfour out of five starting players are aging out of the division, leaving younger teammates to carry on next season.

And for them, losing the players will not only be felt on the court, but off it, too.

Bond beyond ball

Fifty-two Indigenous teams from all around B.C. competed in the annual All Native Basketball tournament in Prince Rupert, which ranApril 3-9.

Burnaby Chiefs' players come from different Indigenous communities across the province and country, whomove to cities like Vancouver for employment, education and better opportunities.

Teams from Indigenous communities have tribal history, culture and generations old family kinships, all of which helpcreate strong bonds between players evenfor a city-based team like the Burnaby Chiefs.

The Burnaby Chiefs share a moment in a huddle before the start of the inermediate men's division championship at the All Native Basketball chamtionship in Prince Rupert on April 9. (Amber Youngchief)

Players spend a lot of time together on and off the floor, often goingto dinner together after practice and games, and are regular visitors at coach ChrisMcKnight'shome.

"There's a lot of mentorship that happens, a lot of camaraderie. There always will be," saidChris, Kobe's father.

Player development

Chris McKnight says the Burnaby Chiefshas a good track record of leading its players to further success.

"Five of our players have gone to play in the North American Indigenous Games," he said.

They also have to work or go to school if they want to play for the team. Chris McKnight and his wife, Amber, help them find employment,or navigate post secondary programs.

"We're not just developing successful players. We're helping develop successful people."

Kobe, who learned to play basketball during elementary school,attends Capilano University where he studies kinesiology and plays shooting guard on the Capilano men's basketball team.

He experienced his first All Native tournament at13 years old, and knew afterward thathe wanted to play in the tourney.

"No matter how much you tell them about it, you have to experience it playing on the court," Kobesaid.

"It's just so different because basketball is part of our culture."

Club team critics

Unlike typical First Nations teams,the Chiefsare a club teamand players don't just come from one First Nation.

"We have players from Nisga'a, Haisla, Heiltsuk, Kitasoo, Carrier Sekani, Haida and Mohawk," Chris McKnight said.

At the All Native tournament, some grumbled that club teams were stacked with star players, giving them an unfair advantage over smaller First Nations teams.

But McKnight challenges this, saying he doesn't do anything different from other successful teams on reserves.

Players know and can feel when someone really, truly cares about their success.- Burnaby Chiefs head coach Chris McKnight

Teams such as those in Haida, Haisla and Greenville run successful programs where leadership invests in players with time, energy and sincere interest in their lives not just by throwing a budget at the team, Chris says.

"Players know and can feel it when someone really, truly cares about their success,"he said. "Not with words but with actions."

Healer helps women's champions

Also returning to the Vancouver area as champions are the All My Relations (AMR) women's basketball team, which beat the Similkameen Starbirds 57-52 to win the All Native women's division title the first in the club's 17-year history.

AMR's Shenise Sigsworth won MVP, whileteammates Adelia Paul and Karalee Antoine were named all-stars.

"This is the first All Nativechampionship for East Van, where a lot of Indigenous people live," said AMR'sJoleen Mitton. "This is a long time coming."

The All My Relations East Van womens' basketball team won the womens' division title at the All Native Basketball tournament in Prince Rupert with a 57-52 victory over the Similkameen Starbirds. (Joleen Mitton)

The finalgame was AMR's second game against the Starbirds, who beat them by 20 points earlier in the tourney, knocking them into the losers' bracket.

The loss shook the team, whohadalso been dealing with a sick head coach and a badly injured player.

"I thought, oh my God, we're not going to win this if we don't fix whatever's happening with us," Mitton said.

Players turned to a traditional healer, who did cultural and spiritual work to ground them. It was just what they needed, Mitton said, and the move paid off immediately:AMR tore through the losers' bracket, notching three straight victories before the rematch with the Starbirds in the championship final.

All My Relations basketball team members celebrate their victory after the championship game at the All Native Basketball tournament. (Joleen Mitton)

"We were a different team, and that [healer]was a big part of it," Mitton said.

"We let go of our anxieties and egos. I cried after, but it was a good cry."