There are 5 wires that come out of the stator running to two plugs. The plug with 3 wires is NOT NEEDED for the engine to RUN as long as you have sufficient battery voltage to operate the ECU (you can literally unplug it and the engine will keep on going just fine). The plug with 2 wires ***IS CRITICAL***. These are the crank sensor wires that tell the ECU where the crankshaft is. Without them, there is no spark. I don't know if you need a scope to test those, or if a simple A/C voltage test will suffice. If there is nothing going on those wires, then you really need to hope that the wire is broken before it gets buried in the engine.
In order to get spark on this engine, you literally need the following connections made to the ECU:
crank sensor,
+12V,
GRD,
+12V (kill switch circuit).
And that is IT.
You check your crank sensor with a scope or A/C voltmeter, you check your GRD with a DC voltmeter (to + terminal on battery), you check both your +12V lines with a DC voltmeter (to - terminal on battery).
The +12V lines in to the ECU are brown with white tracer.
The GRD line in to the ECU is a thick BLACK wire. The crank sensor lines in to the ECU are a WHITE wire with GREEN tracer and a WHITE wire with RED tracer.
You can test all of these connections with the ECU UNPLUGGED, so you can access the connection side of the plug without having to cut into the wires. You won't damage anything cranking it with the ECU unplugged. If these connections are all good and yet it still makes no spark, then your ECU is shot.
Question though: By what means did you determine that there is no spark? If you are checking for spark by listening if it "kicks", then that is an invalid test. You need to test both the input and output of the ignition coils manually, with voltmeter, scope, or in the worst case, with a spark plug. Note that the spark plug threads MUST BE GROUNDED in order to obtain spark.
Edit: Also the BLACK wire with RED tracer must be connected to ground. There is a plug on the wiring harness a couple of inches back from the ECU where all the black/red wires are connected together. When you pop the cover off it, you will see a plate connecting all the wires together. Make sure that that is a solid connection to ground.