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Dwight Schrute
06-10-2010, 01:52 AM
Marcus Basara has politely declined an invitation to join the Prince Albert Raiders.

The Raiders had been courting Basara since they listed the speedy forward last fall, but he decided this week to sign with the junior A Vernon Vipers in his native British Columbia.

Basara, the top scorer with the Canadian midget champion Notre Dame Hounds this past season, wants to remain eligible to play U.S. college hockey, so he opted against the WHL.

“I had a good, long conversation with both my parents and we came to the conclusion that I couldn’t really make the decision to go to the WHL yet,” Basara said from the Athol Murray College of Notre Dame campus in Wilcox, Sask.

“I really wanted to go the NCAA route because that’s kind of where I grew up. I grew up around the BCHL and watching it and seeing those guys develop in that league (and move on to U.S. college). It’s something that I’ve always wanted to do.

“The WHL was never really too much of an option (for me). It being presented to me this year has been a huge confidence boost in my career so far.”

Raiders player-personnel director Dale Derkatch and coach-GM Bruno Campese had multiple meetings with Basara and expressed their confidence in his ability to play major junior.

The 17-year-old winger from Coquitlam, B.C., attended Prince Albert’s spring camp just two weeks ago and he continued to weigh his hockey options.

“I just made up my mind, probably on the weekend,” Basara said. “I knew I had to come to a conclusion on what I wanted to do. And I did that. It was tough. It really was. I wouldn’t lie to you. It was on my mind quite a bit and I just wanted to get it off my mind.

“It was a huge decision that took me a long time to make, because like I told both Bruno and Dale, I’d get up in the morning and sometimes I’d feel that I’d want to go to Vernon, and sometimes I’d get up in the morning and want to go to Prince Albert. It was just kind of a teeter-totter back and forth, not really knowing what I wanted to do.

“The thing about going to the BCHL, this route right now, is I can always still go back and play in the WHL one day, if that’s what I decide to do in the future. But the bad thing about it is you can’t really reverse the other way.”

The NCAA doesn’t permit major junior players to play within its ranks.

Basara hasn’t ruled out a jump to the WHL in the future, but his immediate plans are to report to Vernon for the 2010-11 season and try to earn a scholarship within a couple of years.

“I’m just going to play hockey and have some fun and see where it takes me,” said Basara, who has a week left in his Grade 11 studies at Notre Dame.

“I’m hoping to get some (scholarship) offers, playing in the BCHL. I know a lot of schools look at Vernon as a really highly touted place to get players, so I’m confident with where I’m going in that respect. It’s the path I felt my heart took.”

The Vipers have won back-to-back Royal Bank Cup titles as the Canadian junior A champions.

They scouted Basara last November in Prince Albert, while he was playing with the Hounds in the Ice Mania midget tournament.

“It’s going to be a new-look team,” Basara said of the Vipers. “We’re losing lots of older players to school and age, so it should be fun. I’m excited. Being a little bit closer to home, I know my parents are excited to be able to come watch me play.”

Basara and Notre Dame teammate Daniel Dale were among the top performers in fitness testing at the Raiders’ spring camp.

“I think Prince Albert has a great organization,” Basara said. “I thought everything with the way that whole camp was run was awesome. I had a lot of fun. It was really good to meet all the guys up there, and that option is always going to be there.”

Dwight Schrute
06-10-2010, 01:54 AM
remember when guys would beat the hell out of each other for a chance to play here ?

geez

Raider Believer
06-10-2010, 09:05 AM
remember when guys would beat the hell out of each other for a chance to play here ?

geez

And they still do. Just wait till you see main camp. Basara is a skilled smaller player who does not play big. I'm not terribly disappointed about his choice. It would have been really upsetting if MacKenzie, Balson, Winther or Danyluk had chosen another path. Basara was never as firmly in PA plans as the aforementioned group.

Here is the good news:

One of Prince Albert’s top prospects says he remains committed to the Raiders, even though he didn’t attend the WHL team’s spring camp last month.

Brock Balson, a 17-year-old winger from Kamloops, B.C., said he was otherwise occupied two weekends ago when 19 prospects gathered in Prince Albert.

“I had some prior family commitments before I knew the dates for (the P.A. camp),” he said. “It’s too bad I couldn’t make it out.

“It was a family-reunion thing out of town, so we were kind of tied up with that.”

Balson, also busy with schoolwork this month, intends to attend the Raiders’ main training camp at the end of the summer.

“I’m just going to Prince Albert in late August, and training over the summer,” he said. “That’s about it.”

Raiders coach and general manager Bruno Campese had given Balson permission to sit out the spring camp.

“I told him not to come,” Campese said. “He had some stuff going on, so I just said, ‘Stay home and take care of that. Just be here at main camp.’ ”

Campese has ranked Balson as one of the strongest candidates to earn a full-time job with the Raiders next season. The power forward was with the team for the first month of this past season, before he joined the British Columbia junior B Chase Chiefs last October.

Balson went on to score 19 goals and 36 points in 48 games with the Chiefs, whose lineup included another prospective Raider in 16-year-old forward Marc Mackenzie.

Balson and MacKenzie, along with Raiders prospect Shane Danyluk, participated in Chase’s spring camp last month.

Balson also attended a spring camp with the junior A Salmon Arm SilverBacks of the BCHL. Salmon Arm’s coach and general manager is Prince Albert product Rylan Ferster.

The SilverBacks, whose lineup includes former Prince Albert midgets Travis Statchuk and Josh Manson, has recruited three forwards who have just graduated from the Mintos — Taylor Fauchoux, Bryce Gervais and Cody Michelle, a 2007 draft pick of the Raiders.

Balson, a third-round Prince Albert pick in 2008, said he simply skated with Salmon Arm for ice time, and he doesn’t plan to jump to the SilverBacks.

“Well, they know I’m signed with P.A., so that kind of takes away my eligibility,” he said. “I think they think I’m going to P.A., so I don’t think they’ll come after me, at all.”

Balson believes his stint with Prince Albert last fall will boost his confidence this coming season.

“I think it makes it a lot easier, when you know what’s expected of you and what to expect there with the camp and the fitness testing and all that,” he said.

“I definitely want to stay up there the whole year this time, not just for a month or two.”

Dwight Schrute
06-10-2010, 11:19 PM
that is good news

it would be nice to see those 4 get ice time over plugs like kochin, taylor, etc.....

Chipchura_Fan
06-11-2010, 12:21 AM
it would be nice to see those 4 get ice time over plugs like kochin, taylor, etc.....

agreed! Ugghhh i don't mind Taylor too much but Kochan, I just don't get how he can even make the team. I just don't see it.

Raider Believer
10-18-2010, 09:43 AM
Marcus Basara has politely declined an invitation to join the Prince Albert Raiders.

The Raiders had been courting Basara since they listed the speedy forward last fall, but he decided this week to sign with the junior A Vernon Vipers in his native British Columbia.

Basara, the top scorer with the Canadian midget champion Notre Dame Hounds this past season, wants to remain eligible to play U.S. college hockey, so he opted against the WHL.

“I had a good, long conversation with both my parents and we came to the conclusion that I couldn’t really make the decision to go to the WHL yet,” Basara said from the Athol Murray College of Notre Dame campus in Wilcox, Sask.

“I really wanted to go the NCAA route because that’s kind of where I grew up. I grew up around the BCHL and watching it and seeing those guys develop in that league (and move on to U.S. college). It’s something that I’ve always wanted to do.

“The WHL was never really too much of an option (for me). It being presented to me this year has been a huge confidence boost in my career so far.”

Raiders player-personnel director Dale Derkatch and coach-GM Bruno Campese had multiple meetings with Basara and expressed their confidence in his ability to play major junior.

The 17-year-old winger from Coquitlam, B.C., attended Prince Albert’s spring camp just two weeks ago and he continued to weigh his hockey options.

“I just made up my mind, probably on the weekend,” Basara said. “I knew I had to come to a conclusion on what I wanted to do. And I did that. It was tough. It really was. I wouldn’t lie to you. It was on my mind quite a bit and I just wanted to get it off my mind.

“It was a huge decision that took me a long time to make, because like I told both Bruno and Dale, I’d get up in the morning and sometimes I’d feel that I’d want to go to Vernon, and sometimes I’d get up in the morning and want to go to Prince Albert. It was just kind of a teeter-totter back and forth, not really knowing what I wanted to do.

“The thing about going to the BCHL, this route right now, is I can always still go back and play in the WHL one day, if that’s what I decide to do in the future. But the bad thing about it is you can’t really reverse the other way.”

The NCAA doesn’t permit major junior players to play within its ranks.

Basara hasn’t ruled out a jump to the WHL in the future, but his immediate plans are to report to Vernon for the 2010-11 season and try to earn a scholarship within a couple of years.

“I’m just going to play hockey and have some fun and see where it takes me,” said Basara, who has a week left in his Grade 11 studies at Notre Dame.

“I’m hoping to get some (scholarship) offers, playing in the BCHL. I know a lot of schools look at Vernon as a really highly touted place to get players, so I’m confident with where I’m going in that respect. It’s the path I felt my heart took.”

The Vipers have won back-to-back Royal Bank Cup titles as the Canadian junior A champions.

They scouted Basara last November in Prince Albert, while he was playing with the Hounds in the Ice Mania midget tournament.

“It’s going to be a new-look team,” Basara said of the Vipers. “We’re losing lots of older players to school and age, so it should be fun. I’m excited. Being a little bit closer to home, I know my parents are excited to be able to come watch me play.”

Basara and Notre Dame teammate Daniel Dale were among the top performers in fitness testing at the Raiders’ spring camp.

“I think Prince Albert has a great organization,” Basara said. “I thought everything with the way that whole camp was run was awesome. I had a lot of fun. It was really good to meet all the guys up there, and that option is always going to be there.”

Just checked to see how he was making out in Vernon. After 13 games he has registered 2 goals and 4 assists with 12 minutes in penalties. Doesn't sound like numbers that would make Bruno and staff wallow in regrets.

Dwight Schrute
11-01-2010, 04:17 PM
Just checked to see how he was making out in Vernon. After 13 games he has registered 2 goals and 4 assists with 12 minutes in penalties. Doesn't sound like numbers that would make Bruno and staff wallow in regrets.

since this post, he hasplayed 5 more games adding 3 goals 1 assist.

there is going to be an adjustment period, but i think he will be fine

Dwight Schrute
11-01-2010, 05:11 PM
He will be fine. But he was a guy that was edging towards college the whole time.

definatly, the right move for him