TWolves foundational player earns Wall of Honour spot
PRINCE GEORGE — It’s certainly rare, but when it happens, it can change a program’s fate for years to come. Every coach looks to recruit five-star, blue chip prospects, with fantasies of that player’s potential setting a new standard for others to aspire to. In the case of Dean Whalen, despite playing just two seasons in Northern BC, his production and legacy exceeded even the wildest of projections, posting numbers that have never, and may never, be touched. You can’t tell the story of UNBC Men’s Basketball without bringing up the name Dean Whalen, making him a deserving inductee into the Timberwolves Wall of Honour.
In 1999-2000, the Timberwolves Men’s Basketball team was in its first season of BCCAA competition, looking to develop into a program that could compete with the best teams in the province. UNBC coach Reg Carrick recruited Dean Whalen out of Terry Fox Secondary School, where he had played for legendary coach Rich Chambers.
A broad-chested guard with an innate knack for scoring the basketball, Whalen was recruited by a number of schools, but decided Northern British Columbia was the ideal spot to continue his career.
