

Decades before Own the Podium prepared
amateur athletes for Olympic success, a
young basketball player named Warren
Reynolds had a problem.
Reynolds and his teammates on the national champion
Senior “A” Toronto Dow Kings wanted a shot at playing
in the 1964 Summer Olympics in Tokyo, Japan. But
the Canadian Amateur Basketball Association—the
precursor to Basketball Canada—wasn’t eager to
send a squad to the pre-Olympic tournament in
Yokohama.
The players persisted, and after several weeks of
negotiations the CABA agreed they could go—if they
raised the princely sum of $35,000.
Several companies sponsored the young athletes,
and nine players put up $1,500 each, so strong was
their desire to play.
Buoyed by this support—and assurances that the
players’ investment would be refunded if they made
the Olympics—the team left for Yokohama in October
and promptly won seven of nine games to punch
their ticket to Tokyo.
“Which was extremely exciting, since we all got our
$1,500 back,” Reynolds quipped. The 28–year-old Etobicoke resident had played for
Canada in the 1959 Pan Am Games in Chicago and
the pre-Olympic tournament in Italy four years prior,
but the Tokyo Games were unlike anything he and
his teammates had ever seen.
“Tokyo made Rome look like a Sunday school picnic,”
Reynolds said. “This was the first huge thing Japan
had done since the Second World War. It was the first
massive Olympics.”
After nine games in 12 days in “tremendous heat,”
the tired Canadians did not fare well in tournament
play, dropping seven straight games and quickly falling
out of medal contention.
Heading into the classification round, the thought
in the dressing room was, “We’re not going home
without a victory,” Reynolds said.
The 6 foot 4 guard pulled out all the stops against
Peru, scoring 25 points in an extremely tight game.
He tied the score with three seconds left on the clock,
sending the game to overtime.
Five minutes later, with the game in its dying
seconds, Canada was down by one point.
“We went flying down the floor,” Reynolds said. “I
hit the top of the key, which is where I like to be.”
Teammate Barry Howson fed him the ball. “I turned
and shot without even looking. The buzzer went off,
and the ball went in.”
The 82–81 victory was the team’s only win of the
tournament. But the scorecard didn’t tell the whole
story. The determined Canadians had already proven
their detractors wrong by posting the best pre-Olympic
record of any Canadian team before or since.
“We came 14th in the world. It’s not number one, but
it’s a lot better than 20th,” Reynolds said. “That was
something I always tried to teach my kids: don’t be
down on yourself for getting beat in the finals,
because you had to get there first.”
The Winnipeg native first flashed his skill with a
basketball at Lambton-Kingsway Public School in
Etobicoke. At a time before public leagues, George
Hull—a well-known teacher and vice principal at
Etobicoke Collegiate (ECI)—started a Saturday
morning league with teams from local public schools
plus two ECI squads.
“George Hull loved basketball, and he was the Midget
coach, so he thought that if you developed players at
the public schools that would be coming to Etobicoke,
he would have a better Midget team,” Reynolds
explained. Coaches across the city would later copy
Hull’s template.
Since their school didn’t have any baskets, Reynolds’
team ran plays over and over in the schoolyard.
“Public school basketball wasn’t even heard of in
those days,” said Reynolds. “I don’t think I’d have ever
gone through school if it hadn’t been for George.”
Another figure who put Reynolds on the right path
was Dr. Wilfred Lockhart, minister at his family’s
church, Lambton-Kingsway United. When Reynolds
was 14, the church built an addition that included a
gymnasium. Lockhart soon got used to young Warren
asking him to unlock the gym so he could shoot hoops.
“He got so tired of me bugging him, he finally gave
me a key to the church,” Reynolds said. “Dr. Wilf
Lockhart was the man who changed my life for basketball,
because I had a place to go and practice.”
Reynolds lived in the gym, and all that practice paid
off when the young sharpshooter went to ECI. The
senior basketball team took the city championship
two years running, and the busy athlete was also an
all-star flying wing on two champion football teams.
“High school sports back then, it was a religion,”
Reynolds said. A basketball game drew 700 fans,
ECI’s rickety balcony crammed three deep.
“I was always amazed come Friday night after
a tripleheader that it was still standing,” Reynolds
said. “The competition at that level in those days
was tremendous. When we went to Runnymede
Collegiate, it was like a war. It wasn’t a basketball
game—it was proof of your manhood.”
Reynolds’ parents, Alfred and Bessie, were always in
his corner.
“My father spent six years doing nothing but driving
me somewhere to play something,” he said fondly.
“They never missed a game that they could get to.”
In 1956–57, Reynolds played basketball with the
Junior A Nortown Motor 88s in a national league with
teams from Victoria to Moncton. The 88s won the
finals in Winnipeg, with the Reynolds family and Dr.
Lockhart, who had since become the first president of
the University of Winnipeg, cheering from the stands.
“(Lockhart) sat with my aunts—all six of them. They
drove him crazy,” Reynolds smiled.
When he turned 20, Reynolds was recruited to play
for the Senior A Tillsonburg Livingstons. Canada did
not have a national basketball program at that time,
so in an Olympic year, the national champion seniors
became the Olympic team. Livvies owner Gerry
Livingston—a wealthy industrialist and devout
Catholic—had his sights on a berth at the 1960 Games
in Rome, and an audience with the pope.
Livingston scouted players from across the country,
and Reynolds found himself playing basketball in
tobacco country.
The Livvies took the title and packed their bags for
the pre-Olympic qualifying tournament in Bologna.
They finished outside the final 16, but spent a memorable
time in the Olympic Village.
After one last season in Tillsonburg, Reynolds
moved back to Toronto to start his career. He
married and had the first of two children, settling
into life away from basketball. But when playercoach
Ruby Richman approached him to try for Tokyo
in 1964, Reynolds took to the court once again.
“When you spend your life saying I really want to
play in the Olympics, and you actually get a chance
to do it, it’s quite exciting,” he explained.
Reynolds was inducted into the Canadian Basketball
Hall of Fame in 2001.
Reaching the pinnacle of success in one sport is
impressive enough. But after retiring from basketball
at the ripe old age of 28, Reynolds tried his hand at
another fast-paced game: squash.
Toronto was becoming known as the “squash capital
of the world,” and he was curious to try an individual
sport for a change. His good friend Bob Wharton, a
major Etobicoke developer, installed a squash court
beside a TD Bank he built at Dixie and
Eglinton, and the pair formed the
Dixie Squash Club, which remains
active over four decades later.
The naturally competitive Reynolds
progressed steadily and became 45
and over national squash champion
in 1982.
He mentored young athletes
through the club’s junior squash
program and basketball clinics at
local schools. Today, he works
with a high school basketball
team in his home of Surrey,
BC.
The Olympian sends
the aspiring athletes a
simple message:
“It’s not the time you
put in with other
people, it’s the time
you put in by yourself
that makes
you better.”

