2024 CEBL on TSN Broadcast Team Announced

May 8, 2024

Sixth season of CEBL action tips off May 21 at Scotiabank Saddledome in Calgary on TSN 

The Canadian Elite Basketball League (CEBL) announced Wednesday its 2024 CEBL on TSN broadcast team that will cover the 20 nationally televised games announced in March, beginning with the first game of the season Tuesday, May 21 at 7 p.m. MT / 9 p.m. ET when the Calgary Surge host provincial rival the Edmonton Stingers at Scotiabank Saddledome. 

 

A crew that again includes current and former NBA broadcasters like the legendary Chuck Swirsky (Chicago Bulls), Rod Black (original Raptors television play-by-play broadcaster), Amy Audibert (Miami Heat), Paul Jones (Toronto Raptors) and Nikki Reyes (Raptors sideline reporter for TSN) will be joined by three-time NBA Champion and Chicago Bulls radio colour commentator Bill Wennington, and head coach of the Windsor Lancers women's basketball program and former general manager and head coach of the Hamilton Honey Badgers (now Brampton Honey Badgers), Chantal Vallée. 

 

CBC host Heather Morrison (Saskatchewan Rattlers), and Joe Raso and Dhanung Balsara of CEBL+ also return to the CEBL on TSN broadcast team in 2024, while CEBL+ sideline reporter Esfandiar Baraheni joins the crew for the first time. 

 

2024 CEBL ON TSN BROADCAST TEAM 

 

Chuck Swirsky – Play-By-Play 

Chuck Swirsky has served as the radio play-by-play voice of the Chicago Bulls for the past 16 seasons following 10 years in that capacity with the Toronto Raptors (1998-99 to 2007-08). He has broadcast more than 2,100 NBA games. Swirsky's association with Chicago sports started in 1979 with his WCFL AM 1000 talk show and has also included broadcasting Chicago White Sox games. He was inducted into the Chicagoland Sports Hall of Fame in 2016 and into the Illinois Basketball Coaches Association Hall of Fame and the WGN Radio Walk of Fame in 2018. Swirsky has called play-by-play for University of Michigan basketball and football. Swirsky grew up in Bellevue, Washington and gained his Canadian citizenship in January 2008. 

 

Rod Black – Play-By-Play 

As a Canadian sports broadcaster for over 40 years, Rod Black has been a part of some of sports most iconic events, including multiple Olympic Games and PGA tournaments. He was on the mic for the Toronto Raptors inaugural season television broadcasts. Following a lengthy career with TSN and CTV that included calling Toronto Blue Jays games and leading the pregame coverage of their 1992 and 1993 World Series championships, Black currently broadcasts numerous sports on both a national and regional level around the world. He currently handles play-by-play duties for the CEBL’s Scarborough Shooting Stars. 

 

Amy Audibert – Analyst 

Returning to the CEBL for her fifth season, Niagara Falls native Amy Audibert is currently serving as an analyst on the Miami Heat radio/TV broadcast team. Prior to her South Florida appointment, Audibert was the courtside reporter/analyst for Sportsnet's national coverage of the Toronto Raptors. Amy proudly was the studio analyst for the NBA's first-ever all-female broadcast, which was aired on TSN. Audibert’s on-air experience encompasses calling basketball games for many networks and many leagues, including, the WNBA, the NBA G- League, FIBA, NCAA Men's and Women’s college hoops. 

 

Paul Jones – Analyst 

Paul Jones is Canadian sportscaster who has served as a play-by-play and colour analyst for Toronto Raptors radio broadcasts since the team’s inaugural season in 1995. He appears on the weekly basketball show Hoops on Raptors NBA TV and is a co-host on the show Double Dribble. Jones has also served as studio analyst and sideline reporter for the Raptors and the Canadian Senior Men’s National team  on TSN, CTV, and Rogers Sportsnet. 

 

Joe Raso – Analyst 

Joe Raso, Sr. Director, Basketball Operations for the CEBL, returns for his sixth year on the league’s broadcast staff. Raso has been involved in all levels of basketball for more than 35 years. He is the all-time winningest head coach in McMaster University history, where he coached his teams to four OUA championships and four silver medals at the CIS (now U SPORTS) National Championships. Raso has also worked on the international level as the Head Scout for the Canadian Men’s National Team and was an assistant coach with the program for four years. Raso has experience as a TV analyst for the CEBL, FIBA, CBC, Sportsnet and TSN. 

 

Chantal Vallée – Analyst 

Chantal Vallée is the current head coach of the Windsor Lancers women's basketball program and a former general manager and head coach of the Hamilton Honey Badgers (now Brampton Honey Badgers) – the first woman to hold those roles simultaneously for a men's professional basketball team. Since 2005, the Montreal, Quebec native has built one of the top women's basketball programs in the country at the University of Windsor, a tenure that includes 10 consecutive trips to the OUA final four while earning nine straight OUA medals following the 2016-17 season, and capturing five consecutive CIS (now U SPORTS) national titles in 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, and 2015. Vallée has also contributed as a colour commentator for basketball on prominent Canadian broadcasting channels, including CBC, CTV, Sportsnet, TSN, and RDS. Her broadcasting resume includes significant sporting events such as the 2012, 2016 and 2020 Summer Olympics and the 2019 NBA Playoffs. 

 

Bill Wennington – Analyst 

Bill Wennington recently completed his 21st season as colour commentator for all Chicago Bulls radio broadcasts, partnering with Chuck Swirsky to broadcast Bulls games on WSCR 670 AM and the Bulls Radio Network. He was also a sideline reporter for FOX SportsNet Chicago during the 2002-03 season. A 13-year veteran of the NBA, Wennington spent six seasons with the Bulls (1993-94 through 1998-99), which included three World Championships. The native of Montreal was also a member of the 1984 and 1992 Canadian Olympic Teams and was recently inducted into the Quebec Basketball Hall of Fame and the Canadian Basketball Hall of Fame. He played his college basketball at St. John’s University and was inducted into the school’s Basketball Hall of Fame in 2002. 

 

Heather Morrison – Sideline Reporter 

Heather Morrison, a member of the CEBL’s Saskatchewan Rattlers broadcast team, is a broadcaster and public speaking coach from Saskatoon. This is Morrison’s fourth season with the CEBL. She is the founder and president of Deliver Your Best public speaking coaching. She has also handled sideline coverage for Canada West Football and spent three years as an associate producer with CBC Saskatchewan, where she also hosted radio programs and was a television weather reporter. Last season Morrison had the honour of covering the CEBL's Western Conference Finals and Championship Weekend. 

 

Nikki Reyes – Sideline Reporter 

Nikki Reyes is an anchor for TSN’s SportsCentre and a sideline reporter for Toronto Raptors coverage on TSN. She was also an Anchor/Reporter on Sportsnet in Toronto and at NESN in Boston covering the Celtics, Bruins and Patriots. 

 

Dhanung Bulsara – Sideline Reporter 

Dhanung Bulsara, commonly known as ‘D', enters his fourth season with the CEBL as a sideline reporter. For the past three seasons, Bulsara has patrolled the sidelines covering home games for the Guelph Nighthawks (2021, 2022), Brampton Honey Badgers and Niagara River Lions. Last season saw him draw his first of multiple assignments on TSN, covering nationally televised games for the league. This past summer also saw Bulsara make his debut as the in-game host for the Toronto Blue Jays. He has previous experience as the Raptors 905 in-game host, spending two seasons with the team. 

 

Esfandiar Baraheni – Sideline Reporter 

Esfandiar Baraheni has been a basketball reporter, writer and producer for over five years, working with publications like TheScore, Bleacher Report, TSN, Spotify, and Raptors Republic — specializing in covering the Toronto Raptors and the rest of the NBA. 

 

Season tickets and flex packs are now available league wide with priority seating access and preferred pricing. Ticket information for all CEBL games, including single-game tickets, can be found by visiting cebl.ca/tickets. More than 50 CEBL games will be broadcast live nationally on TSN and Game+ this season. Fans can also livestream all regular season, playoff and Championship Weekend games on TSN+, CEBL+ powered by BetVictor, and the CEBL Mobile app for iOS and Android devices. 

 

- CEBL - 

 

 

About the CEBL 

A league created by Canadians for Canadians with a mission to develop Canadian players, coaches, sports executives, and referees, the CEBL boasts the highest percentage of Canadian players of any pro league in the country with 73% of its 2023 rosters being Canadian. Players bring experience from the NBA, NBA G League, top international pro leagues, the Canadian National team program, and top NCAA programs as well as U SPORTS. Fourteen players have signed NBA contracts following a CEBL season, and numerous CEBL players attend NBA G League training camps every year. The CEBL season runs from May through August. More information about the CEBL is available at CEBL.ca and @cebleague on Instagram, Twitter, TikTok, LinkedIn, Facebook & YouTube

May 7, 2025
Any casual observer of the Fraser Valley-Trinity Western U SPORTS men’s basketball game on Feb. 14 would not have noticed anything amiss. They would have watched as the Spartans withstood a late Cascades charge to win an overtime thriller. They would have seen – though, probably not paid any mind to – Ukrainian referee Andrii Babyk. But they could not have known that, just days earlier, Andrii’s brother, Viktor, was killed in war. “For my dad, basketball helps him to not think about anything,” explained Bogdan, Babyk’s 13-year-old son. Andrii continued: “When I have a game, it's two hours in the game, one hour in pre-game and one hour in post-game. These four hours, I think just for basketball in this time. And after again, I think about this situation. I'm calling my mom, my father, and we talk a lot. But for me, it’s important, when I said, ‘OK, I'll ref,’ I can’t cancel.” Babyk is a lifelong basketball junkie whose journey will take him to the CEBL for a Vancouver Bandits exhibition game on May 8, followed by some regular-season assignments. He and his family – wife Iulia, sons Dima, 23, and Bogdan, 13, and daughter Ieva, 5 — escaped Ukraine three years ago, relocating to West Vancouver, B.C. But even as they find a semblance of normalcy, Babyk’s parents and sister continue to reside, and fight, in an active warzone in Kiev. And so when Andrii received word of his brother’s death, he could hardly have been blamed for sitting out his scheduled game. He did not do that. “I have been a referee for 27 years and I never cancel my game. I don't do it yet,” he said. Babyk was originally introduced to the sport by a school friend, but his family lacked the funds to enroll him onto a proper team. Instead, he played his way on, convincing a coach to let him try out and earning twice-weekly practices. Quickly, two became five. Eventually, Babyk played on his high school team, won a provincial championship, then continued down the basketball path until a hard fall damaged his shoulders. “I have a problem three months, I can't move my shoulders and I understand I can't play after this, but I love basketball, what I can do the next step?” Babyk wondered. “I said, OK, I'm trying to ref.” Babyk showed up to his first game as a referee without a whistle – luckily, an older ref had an extra one and gave it to Babyk. He still remembers that first whistle, though 27 years later, it’s no longer in use. Meanwhile, Babyk also took up a position as general manager of the Ukraine women’s 3x3 team, which won silver at the world championships in China in 2016. Six years later, Russia invaded Ukraine. Suddenly, basketball suddenly took a back seat. The Babyks — who owned house, a store and two cars — suddenly had nothing. “We had everything. That's why I have three kids. I can give my kids what I want, you know? But when the war started, we lost this all,” Babyk said. Iulia, Bogdan and Ieva fled to Bulgaria, then to Vancouver, where they were welcomed by a host family. Andrii and Dima stayed behind in Kiev in an underground bunker for eight months. When they finally arrived in Vancouver, Ieva, then just two years old, did not recognize her dad. “She forgot my face, she doesn't know who I am. It's really heavy because [on FaceTime] she sees me and it's different when she sees me in life. And we cried, me, my kids. It's really heavy,” Babyk said. Iulia questioned her husband for not fighting in the war. “My wife asked me, ‘what are you doing? The war has started.’ I said, I need to help you save the kids.” Just before he got on a plane himself, Andrii made sure to find someone connected to Canadian basketball to get a foot in the door. Once he got settled, he sent a letter to the CEBL: … War is a dreadful experience. I am grateful that my large family, including my wife and three children, is safe in Canada and can sleep in beds, not in basements. … I aspire to return to refereeing at a high level and would be grateful for the opportunity to join your team. … Thank you for spending your time on me! I will justify what you give me the opportunity to become a part of the team. … It's now been three years since the Babyks first began arriving in Canada. Andrii has worked for Uber and Doordash as well as in construction. The family now lives in its own apartment near its original host. All the while, Babyk has stayed in touch with basketball, reffing in whatever leagues will let him on the court. Mike Thomson, a member of the CEBL Referee Advisory Team, said it didn’t take much longer than 10 minutes to recognize Babyk’s talent after he first saw him at a training camp. “You're always looking for somebody that can be adaptable, can be flexible and can learn very quickly,” Thomson explained. On the court, Babyk demonstrated a knack for discerning between contact with consequence and run-of-the-mill in-game physicality, Thomson said. “Andrii's game didn't need to get better. Andrii just needed to be comfortable in an environment that was culturally different,” Thomson said. “As a referee on the floor, he may not be able to respond as quickly and concisely verbally as somebody that, English is their first language. So he has to do it by demonstrating that he has a deep understanding of the game and earn respect immediately by showing that he understands the game.” Apparently, Babyk’s talents are genetic, too. Dima has also taken a liking to the ref stripes – he will work some CEBL games this season at the scorer’s table. But Thomson has higher aspirations for Dima. “There are no more than a small handful of officials in Canada that have the level of potential that Dima has. When you see Dima on the floor, you immediately go, that guy's a referee. Dima actually has the ‘it factor’ with him. He carries himself like a referee,” Thomson said. Babyk had a slightly different take on Dima. “I'm really critical father. Because Canada is really different culture. For me, when Dima have a mistake, I tell him. You need to do [this], need to do that. ‘Father, why you tell me that?’ Because I want to help.” Babyk worked his first CEBL game during pre-season last year. “I realized that this is a chance for me to show my boys Dima and Bogdan by my example — everything in life is possible — I CAN BE IN BASKETBALL - I CAN BE PART OF CANADIAN BASKETBALL AND BENEFIT AS A REFEREE,” he said in a text message. "If you were given a chance — then use it. And most importantly, never forget in your life how and when you got your first chance — APPRECIATE IT ALL YOUR LIFE. My credo in life — Where there's a will, there's a way." Indeed, Babyk’s background and story are undoubtedly unique among Canadian referees. Think back to that game at Fraser Valley now. “You talk about resilience — when I saw him that particular night out at Fraser Valley, it blew me away that he could go on the floor and completely compartmentalize that and referee the game without that on his mind,” Thomson said. You never would have known.
May 7, 2025
Nicholas has experience with the South Bay Lakers, Cleveland Charge and the College Park Skyhawks of the NBA G League
May 7, 2025
Rattlers training camp roster includes a mix of NBA and CEBL experiences players
May 7, 2025
Canadian fintech leader commits to cashback program on all CEBL ticket purchases for Neo Mastercard holders
May 7, 2025
The team’s 16-man preseason roster features experienced talent from CEBL, NBA G League, and top leagues around the world
May 7, 2025
Le personnel sera dirigé par le directeur général, James Derouin, et l’entraîneur-chef, David DeAveiro
May 7, 2025
The staff will be lead by general manager, James Derouin and head coach, David DeAveiro
May 7, 2025
The Bandits start their season at home May 22 in a 2024 CEBL Final rematch with Niagara
May 6, 2025
Les BlackJacks d'Ottawa de la Ligue élite canadienne de basketball (LECB), la plus grande ligue sportive professionnelle du Canada, ont annoncé aujourd'hui que l'équipe a signé l'arrière Matt Coleman III pour un contrat pour la saison 2025. Le natif de Norfolk, en Virginie, fait son retour dans la LECB après avoir disputé la saison 2023 avec Ottawa, où il a pris part à neuf matchs et affiché des moyennes de 9,4 points, 4,1 passes décisives et 3,9 rebonds par rencontre, tout en menant l’équipe avec 1,7 interception par match. « Nous sommes ravis d’accueillir Matt de retour à Ottawa cette saison, » a déclaré James Derouin, directeur général des BlackJacks. « Son retour apportera une voix de vétéran à notre groupe, son style de leadership et son caractère ajoutant un élément essentiel à notre vestiaire au quotidien. Grâce à son éthique de travail et à son engagement, il contribuera à donner le ton pour notre équipe cette saison. » Arrière de 6 pi 2 po, il évolue durant la saison 2024-2025 avec le Hapoel Haifa en première division israélienne (BSL), où il mène l’équipe au chapitre des passes décisives totales (89) et des points par match (15,0), tout en partageant le premier rang pour les interceptions par match (1,6). Il a enregistré son tout premier double-double en carrière internationale en signant un sommet de saison de 29 points et 12 passes décisives, le 7 avril contre le Hapoel Upper Galilee Safed. Titulaire accompli pendant quatre saisons à l’Université du Texas, il a reçu de nombreuses distinctions au niveau universitaire, notamment deux sélections dans la troisième équipe All-Big 12 (2020, 2021), deux mentions honorables All-Big 12 (2018, 2019) et le titre de Joueur par excellence du tournoi Big 12 en 2021. Cette année-là, il a aidé les Longhorns à remporter le championnat de conférence grâce à une performance de 30 points en finale contre Oklahoma State, menée par Cade Cunningham, qui deviendra le premier choix du repêchage NBA 2021. Il a disputé un total de 13 matchs dans la NBA Summer League avec les Kings de Sacramento en 2021 et 2022, avant de poursuivre sa carrière professionnelle en Grèce, en Turquie et en Pologne. Son frère, Chase, a joué pendant quatre saisons avec l’Université de Virginie (2019-2023), tandis que son père, Clifford, ancien joueur à la Newport News Apprentice School (NCAA Division III), est actuellement entraîneur-chef au Bryant and Stratton Junior College à Newport News, en Virginie. Il est actuellement possible d'acheter des forfaits de billets flexibles en visitant le site theblackjacks.ca/fr-ca/tickets . Les abonnements de saison des BlackJacks 2025 sont disponibles dès maintenant. Pour plus de détails, les amateurs sont invités à envoyer un courriel à [email protected] ou à composer le 613-690-0519. ### À propos des BlackJacks d'Ottawa: Première franchise d'expansion de la Ligue élite canadienne de basketball (LECB), les BlackJacks d'Ottawa présentent le meilleur du basket-ball et du divertissement dans la capitale nationale. Le bureau de direction d'Ottawa apporte à la franchise son expérience de la NBA, de la NBA G League, de l'équipe nationale, de la NCAA et des grandes ligues professionnelles internationales. Dirigée par le directeur général James Derouin et l'entraîneur-chef Dave DeAveiro, l'équipe d'Ottawa joue ses matchs à domicile dans l'aréna de classe mondiale de la Place TD, dans le parc Lansdowne. Pour plus d'informations, visitez le site theblackjacks.ca .
May 6, 2025
In 2023, Coleman III appeared in nine games with the BlackJacks and averaged 9.4 points, 4.1 assists and 3.9 rebounds
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