NBA

RJ Barrett joins NBAers planning to play for Canada at last-chance Olympic qualifier

New York Knicks rookie forward RJ Barrett is the latest player to commit to play for the Canadian men's basketball team at the last-chance Olympic qualifying tournament next summer in Victoria.

Canadian rookie makes commitment ahead of 1st NBA game against home-town Raptors

RJ Barrett guesses he'll have up to 300 family and friends attend his NBA homecoming in Toronto on Wednesday. (Emilee Chinn/Getty Images)

The momentum keeps building for Canada's men's basketball team.

RJ Barrett became the latest NBA star to commit to playing this summer in Canada's quest for its first Olympic berth since the 2000 Sydney Games.

"One-hundred per cent, definitely plan on playing for my country this summer," the New York Knicks rookie said. "I'm very proud to say that."

The 19-year-old from Mississauga, Ont., declared his intentions Wednesday hours before Knicks faced the Toronto Raptors in Barrett's first NBA game at home.

Barrett's announcement continues a groundswell of commitment from some of the country's top players. Denver Nuggets star guard Jamal Murray announced Tuesday evening that he's on board to play this summer. Oklahoma City Thunder guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and New Orleans Pelicans guard Nickeil Alexander-Walker added their names to the list a few hours later.

Dillon Brooks, Dwight Powell and Khem Birch have also said they'll play, while Kelly Olynyk and Cory Joseph virtually never turn down a Canadian team invite.

"It's great to see everyone buying in and trying to do something great for our country. It's really exciting," Barrett said. "People want to play and it's finally starting to show now."

WATCH | RJ Barrett in his NBA debut with the Knicks: 

RJ Barrett puts up 21 points in his NBA debut

5 years ago
Duration 0:42
The Mississauga, Ontario native played 37 minutes in his debut with the Knicks on Wednesday.

Earlier Wednesday, Canada learned it will host Greece, the Czech Republic, Turkey, China and Uruguay in its last-chance qualifying tournament June 23-28 in Victoria. Canada must win to clinch its first men's Olympic berth since the 2000 Sydney Games.

"The draw is tough, it's tough," said Nick Nurse, who was hired last summer to coach the team through Olympic qualifying. "There's three teams in the top 15 in the world in our group. . . so I think it's a very challenging group and a very challenging prospect, but it should be, right?

"There's only a couple of teams that get a free pass to the Olympics and most of them have to really earn their way through it and we're going to have to earn our way too. It's a hell of a goal, and certainly a worthy thing to accomplish and we're going to have to earn it through some really good teams."

Barrett's dad Rowan, who's also the general manager of the men's team, played in those Games alongside Canadian legend Steve Nash. The younger Barrett is keen to follow in his father's footsteps.

"It's the way to serve and give back to your country," RJ Barrett said.

Canada's men's program has been criticized for its absence of NBA talent. Expectations for last summer's World Cup were sky-high. Canada could have assembled perhaps the best team in program history. But one-by-one the big names withdrew for various reasons. Birch and Joseph were the only NBA players to make the trip to China where Canada, led by Toronto Raptors coach Nick Nurse, finished 21st.

Barrett is no stranger to donning the red and white. He earned tournament MVP honours at the U19 World Cup, where Canada captured an historic gold medal, despite being the team's youngest player.

The six-foot-seven rookie, who was picked third overall in this year's NBA draft, is averaging 15.1 points, 5.6 rebounds and 3.6 assists with the Knicks.

He said he's living the dream.

"Sometimes when I'm on the court I literally just stop and am like, 'Wow, I'm really here,"' Barrett said through a wide smile. "So to me it's just my everything, it means the world to me and it's just the beginning."

Barrett had been battling an illness and was listed as questionable for Wednesday's game. But the Canadian vowed a bug wouldn't keep him from his first NBA game at home.

"I think everybody when they go home has (that game) circled," Barrett said.

He estimated there would be 300 friends and family members at Scotiabank Arena on Wednesday night.

"Everybody kind of feels something for where they grew up, where they came from," Barrett said. "For me, Canada, the whole country had my back. I love them for that."

Barrett's love of the game flourished in what was then the Air Canada Centre. He sat courtside for his first ever Raptors game as a 10-year-old. His dad was being honoured that night.

"When I think about coming back here and playing my first game, coming to the arena just now for shootaround I was thinking about all the times where my dad took me to a playoff game, or I was able to come and watch LeBron play, or I was able to sit courtside and watch the Hawks play one time," Barrett recalled. "So just to see all that and now for me to be playing this game means a lot to me and I'm just excited and I'm going to have fun."

Knicks coach David Fizdale didn't expect Barrett to be affected by the moment.

"I just know that any time you go home you want to perform, you want to play for your family and your friends. I'm just trying to keep that adrenaline down a little bit, I don't want him running around throwing the ball over the place," Fizdale said.

"(But) today you would have thought we were in any other gym. It was like any other shootaround today. I'm expecting him to play well."

Fizdale said the Canadian is easy to coach.

"His maturity, he's a steady kid. All the guys that I've worked with — when you can tell them something and they apply it right away? That's usually a guy that's pretty special and he's one of those guys," Fizdale said. "If you show him something, he's got it. You have to have certain kind of focus and maturity to do that and he has that."