Latest news with #EmilyPotter


Winnipeg Free Press
5 days ago
- Sport
- Winnipeg Free Press
‘It means everything'
As the 2025 FIBA Women's AmeriCup tips off tomorrow in Santiago, Chile, Winnipeg's Emily Potter and Niyah Becker are looking to help Canada secure its fourth title as part of a stacked 12-player senior women's national basketball team roster. The most prestigious senior women's basketball tournament in the Americas will run from June 28 to July 6, with Canada set to share Group A with Argentina, Brazil, the Dominican Republic and El Salvador. The top four teams in the group advance to the quarterfinals, followed by a single-knockout format, where teams hope to be among the final six to earn a spot in the 2026 FIBA Women's Basketball World Cup qualifying tournament taking place in March. MUAD ISSA / CANADA BASKETBALL This is Emily Potter's second AmeriCup appearance. Potter is coming off an award-winning season in the Basketball League of Serbia. For Becker, who's been part of the Canadian national team program since she was 16, it's her first time making the senior national team, and whether it's rebounding or attacking, her goal is to do whatever the team needs to bring them gold. 'It means everything,' said Becker. 'I feel like, just since I was a little girl, I've always had the goal of playing on the national team, especially the senior team, and this being my first year, actually suiting up and dressing for the senior team was really important to me — really big. I just feel really proud to have made it.' The 6-2 forward, who graduated from Wake Forest University in 2023, just wrapped up her second year of professional basketball overseas with IDK Euskotren of the Endesa women's league, based in Donostia-San Sebastián, Spain. The previous season, Becker played for ZKK Cinkarna Celje of the Slovenian Basketball League. 'In college and stuff, you're used to playing people around your age, and then you go overseas, and you could be playing with 16-year-olds that are amazing, and also 40-year-olds that are just as amazing, but with more experience,' said Becker. 'So I feel like my game definitely grew in the thinking aspect, like the IQ side and playing at an intense level all season long.' Team Canada features five Olympians who represented the Senior Women's National Team in Paris last summer, including Kayla Alexander, Shay Colley, Yvonne Ejim, Sami Hill and Syla Swords. Shy Day-Wilson, Delaney Gibb, Phillipina Kyei, Merissah Russell and Tara Wallack complete the roster. 'It makes a really fun competitive training environment,' said Becker on the team's talent. 'Our practices, we still have lots of fun, but it's just everyone is so good, so smart, it kind of just tests you, and it makes you bring your best self every day.' Becker met Potter two summers ago at her first senior camp, and the pair have remained close ever since, training together at home during the summers and staying in touch while overseas. 'I think, in general, any of the players that are from the prairies — Alberta, Saskatchewan or Manitoba — we just take that extra pride in representing our province, because there's not a lot of us,' said Potter. 'This is the first time in I don't know how many years, I have no idea if there's ever been two Manitoba players on the team at the same time, it's been decades for sure, at least.' Potter, a 6-4 forward and University of Utah graduate, is coming off a historic year in Serbia with the Crvena Zvezda Basketball Club, going undefeated 27-0 en route to claiming the league championship and national cup title. KARL B. DEBLAKER / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS This is Niyah Becker's first time making the senior national team. 'I think I was challenged in different ways that I hadn't experienced before,' said Potter, who was named finals MVP and Player of the Year. 'This is my seventh year playing professionally, so I really feel like I'm stepping more into a leadership role within a team, even if I'm overseas.' This is Potter's second AmeriCup appearance, her first being in 2023 when Canada finished third. Thursdays Keep up to date on sports with Mike McIntyre's weekly newsletter. She says there's definitely new energy this time around with a new coaching staff leading the team, including Canada's head coach Nell Fortner, the winningest coach in USA Basketball women's history, who is making her senior women's national team debut. 'Our team is really good, and we know how to play well with each other,' said Becker. 'We know what to look for, and it doesn't matter who's on the court, we're all going to play to the Canadian standard. And we've been instilled by our coaches this training camp that the standard is gold.' Canada is currently ranked 7th in the FIBA World Rankings (women), with AmeriCup golds in 1995, 2015 and 2017, and a consistent track record of finishing in the top four at every tournament since 2009. 'I don't take any of these opportunities for granted,' said Potter. 'Anytime I'm in this group, it's just my favourite basketball environment to be in. For me, there is no higher level than this.'


CBC
16-05-2025
- Climate
- CBC
'So much devastation': Lac du Bonnet evacuees grieve destruction as wildfire rages on
Social Sharing People who were forced out of their homes by a wildfire in eastern Manitoba say they're shattered by the scale of destruction and loss seen in their close-knit community. The fire in the rural municipality of Lac du Bonnet has claimed two lives and destroyed dozens of homes. As of Thursday, the 4,000-hectare blaze was still considered out of control. Between 800 and 1,000 people are estimated to have been forced to out of their homes and cottages in the community, which is about 100 kilometres northeast of Winnipeg. Michelle Potter and her daughter Emily were among the evacuees. She said her home survived, but everything around it was destroyed by the fire. The family saw ruined homes and the wreckage of vehicles abandoned on the road as they made their way to safety Tuesday. "A lot of cottages have been — there's not even any rubble left," she said. "We're just kind of like this little pocket and we're OK. And then up the road, everything is gone." WATCH | Lac du Bonnet evacuees recount evacuation: Lac du Bonnet residents recount evacuation as wildfire raged nearby 9 hours ago Duration 2:53 Michelle Potter had just moments to pack up what they could from her family's home near Lac du Bonnet, Man. She's now staying in Beausejour, while her daughter Emily Potter is in Winnipeg. "It truly feels like a miracle that the fire turned direction and spared us," said Emily Potter, who leaves near her mother. "But it's really hard to feel like we got a win when there's so much devastation and lost lives and horrible things happening." RCMP announced Wednesday it found the remains of a couple who were trapped in Lac du Bonnet by the flames. Police said first responders couldn't get to them earlier because of the extreme conditions caused by the fire. People in the area said Sue and Richard Nowell were well known in the close-knit community, and their death leaves them heartbroken. Lac du Bonnet devastated by wildfire deaths. 10 hours ago Duration 2:21 News of the deaths of two people from the RM of Lac du Bonnet in a wildfire earlier this week has hit the community hard. Premier Wab Kinew said the deaths turned 'an emergency into a tragedy.' Shane McCoy lives near where the couple was found. He and his wife, Lydia left their home Tuesday after RCMP told them they had to go. "We've just been going by the grace of God that we still have a house. Neighbours haven't been so fortunate," he said. "There's quite a few neighbours that don't have a home to [come back] to anymore." The RM of Lac du Bonnet said the fire had destroyed at least 28 structures as of Thursday. McCoy said that while the home is OK, he's worried the wind could push the fire closer, as well as about the safety of their pet birds. He said he doesn't know when he'll be able to go back. Michelle Potter is staying in Beausejour, while Emily is in Winnipeg. She said she'd never thought she'd ever question whether she would be able to return to a home she's lived in since the late 1980s. Emily said her mom had to be dragged out by her stepdad as she attempted to take all the family's photos off the wall and pack them up. "There's just so many decades of memories of living there. I know it was really hard for my mom to leave that place and not to know what you're going back to," she said.


CBC
15-05-2025
- CBC
'Very little time' to flee Manitoba fires
Evacuees Michelle Potter and her daughter Emily Potter recount fleeing the deadly wildfires in Manitoba. 'There's not even any rubble left,' said Michelle. 'It was fearful. It was extremely scary.'