Archive for the “Toronto Raptors” Category
Well, as distasteful as it all is, I’ll mention the lawsuit reported today against Chris Bosh. Chris’ ex says he cut her off and hasn’t supported their kid since her birth. Chris says he’ll take of his responsibilities. In other words, classic he said/she said.
I’m not going to speculate or cast aspersions on anyone. I for one trust the courts to sort this stuff out. If she’s trying to “play him,” as some say, hopefully the courts will recognize that and not let her get away with it. If Chris has been a deadbeat, hopefully the courts will figure that out and that kid will get the support it needs.
At the end of the day, that’s all that matters. Both of these people, both adults, need to sort their shit out – and if they need the help of a court, fine – and get right to making that kids life the best it can be. That’s a simplistic view, perhaps, but honestly… that’s what the focus has to be.
As for what’s going on in the rest of the Raptor world, well, not much. They’ve signed someone named Quincy Douby to a 10-day, and brought back Nate Jawai, to fill out the bench for the last couple weeks. Perhaps that means they’re getting ready to give Bosh, Jose and Bargnani extended rests? A little more Roko-motion? I’m not a fan of “shutting players down” unless they’ve got an actual injury – there are still people paying to see these games, and they’re paying to see the best players after all, and I vehemently disagree with tanking. But if those players play 5 or 6 fewer minutes than usual, if the young guys get a little more burn, I think we can all live with that.
Now, couple other things… I’ve been writing intermittently, finishing up my Watchmen review, my Secret Invasion Review, and some thoughts on iPhone 3.0. But it’s been a crazy couple of weeks so I’ve not had time to edit them and get them posted. It’s all coming soon, though. Stay tuned.
Tags: Chris Bosh, Toronto Raptors
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Well, that was awful. Like stepping in dog poop. You know you can wipe it off on the pavement or grass but that stink is gonna stick with you all day.
Actually that kind of sums up the whole season. Sigh.
I figured the Raps would drop last night’s game, but I thought it would be fun to watch. Instead, it was awful to watch, especially when seeing the Bobcats - the Charlotte freakin’ Bobcats, with all of 700 people in the stands - play exactly the sort of basketball this Raptors team SHOULD be playing. Moving the ball. Setting screens. Taking easy, open jumpers. Getting out in transition. Honestly, they dismantled the Raptors easily, and it’s not like they broke ground on some new basketball schemes to do it - they played fundamental ball and hit open shots and the Raptors were completely clueless.
Not much point in analyzing this one, the Raptors did nothing well, they lost badly to a team that’s 10 games under .500. It’s the latest outing, in this seemingly never-ending season, that the Raptors did not show up, did not hustle, settled for jumpers, did not defend, did not rebound, didn’t get back in transition, didn’t do much of anything. How is it possible, that a team of professionals plays like that on a regular basis? I just don’t know. You expect it to happen a handful of times in a season - every team has their off day, their slump - and you know you can get blown out by good teams, even when your team plays well. But with this team, it happens every other game it seems, and they get killed by good and bad teams alike! I just can’t understand it, I have no explanation, and it’s driving me slowly insane.
Tags: Charlotte Bobcats, Toronto Raptors
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Hey, a win! A big one, too. And against that dreaded two-headed TJ Ford/Rasho Nesterovic monster!
How annoying is it that the last Raptors game, even though it was a loss, was a fantastic basketball game against a good team – but not on TV, and this game, a win, but a thoroughly boring blowout win over another underachieving team – was on CBC and probably seen by the most people? Figures, right?
Oh well. Always nice to see your team win, and even though it was a blowout, there were some exciting moments, courtesy Shawn Marion and Pops Mensah-Bonsu.
Fast forward to the third quarter, Raps leading but the game is still pretty back and forth. Then Bargnani hauls in a rebound, takes one dribble, and throws a lead pass (it’s true, it happened!) to a streaking Marion. I’m assuming we’ve all seen Danny Granger get destroyed by the Matrix by now; if not, youtube it, and agree with me that it was the most sensational dunk the Raps have seen since Air Canada was patrolling the skies. I know Joey’s had a couple nice slams and even Bosh has posterized a couple guys, but man, that was an absolutely sick display of hops from Marion. He simply obliterated Granger on the play; I actually felt embarrassed for the guy.
Marion had an alley-oop on the next play and PMB kept things jumpin’ with more hustle than we’ve seen from the anyone on this team in the last 22 months, and the rout was on. All in all, the Raps outscored Indy 37-19 in the period and never looked back.
Doug Smith mentioned this morning that Pops’ play might actually be driving up his price – out of the Raptors’ pay range. He might be right. Five games, 18.6 minutes, 7.6 points, 8.6 boards? Granted, his team has a 1-4 record, he’s missed 18 of 30 shots and has notched a total of one assist. But he’s also taken charges, played hard on defense, and hustled after every ball. Naturally, you say “you can’t make a judgment on five games!” but you know how this league works. Show even an ounce of potential, and someone will offer you a million dollars. If he averages 6 and 8 the rest of the way, and keeps hustling like that, this summer someone will offer him a two-year, $5 million deal. They’ll say, “if he can develop any sort of offensive game besides cleaning up misses, and can stay out of foul trouble, he could average a double-double!” And they may be right.
Hopefully, playing for the Raps will keep his success obscure, and the economy will keep his value down. I would love for him to be here next year – he is bringing everything this team has been missing – but I really don’t want to overpay for him!
As for the rest of the team, Bosh was frustrating to watch yesterday, as he went through the motions on offense. He settled for jumper after jumper, watching each one clang off the rim; he finally went inside, got a dunk and a short jump hook… then went back to clanging jumpers. What the hell, man? Indy’s got no one that can guard you! Take it to them, especially when the J is off! Sigh. Luckily Bargnani (27, on 9-11) took up the slack. Great game from Il Mago, still recovering from the flu.
Meanwhile, Jose Calderon had his second great game in a row, leading everyone to cry, “if only he’d been healthy all year, this team would be so much better!” Who knows if that’s true, and besides, I still see no reason why that hamstring hasn’t healed. Oh wait, I know the reason: we have the worst medical staff in the league. (I notice Jermaine O’Neal, who could barely stay on the floor for us, hasn’t missed a game and is playing 31 minutes a night for the Heat. I rest my case). If any changes are made this summer, I hope “new medical staff” is at the top of the list. Anyway. I really do enjoy watching Calderon play when he’s mixing up the drives and the jumpers. He’s so much more effective, and even if his defense is weak, he at least makes the opposing PG pay on the other end. I hope he keeps it up.
Anyway. It’s back to action tonight against the suddenly-superior Charlotte Bobcats. Larry Brown is turning that team around folks; they’re a game-and-a-half out of the playoffs and will likely break the franchise record for wins (a dubious 33). We could put a serious dent in those playoff hopes with wins tonight and Friday; but the Bobcats have strengths at many of our weakest spots. They penetrate and kick, they have some rebounders, they hustle. We don’t do those things, not often anyway, and we don’t stop other people from doing them to us.
Still, talent wise, these teams are on even ground. This could actually be an entertaining game, and lo and behold, it’s actually on TV! Prediction, hmm… well, I think the teams will split these two meetings, and Charlotte will take it tonight, by 9.
Tags: Charlotte Bobcats, Indiana Pacers, Toronto Raptors
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It’s funny, I keep saying that at this point, with the season over, all I want to see are exciting games. Well, they’ve had three of those in the past week but thanks to TSNFU, I haven’t been able to see them! Such a ridiculous situation.
Sounds like it was a great game last night, with the raps clawing back in regulation, and again in OT, before falling short. No surprise there, but nice to see then hang with a team that usually kills them, to give the home crowd a show.
Sounds like Calderon finally started going to the whole last night. Where’s that been all year? Looks like PMB had another solid game, marred by a youngster mistake on the final play. That’s tough, but no one else on the team would have made that play so I’ll forgive it.
Bargnani only played a few minutes thanks to the flu bug; that’s a shame, he’d been playing so well lately. Calderon set the franchise assist record, congrats to him - too bad it couldn’t come in a winning season.
Well, now the so-called easy stretch begins. Can they finish up 8-8? 10-6? 12-4?? Hey, a guy cab dream…
Tags: Detroit Pistons, Toronto Raptors, TSN2
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Well, we’ve got another tilt in this seemingly never-ending Raptors season tonight, where our boys look to drop their seventh in a row to the Pistons…and fall 20 games below .500..
20 games. That’s a sobering number. I mean, obviously, this team is underachieving, but that really puts it into perspective. That number shocked me. Let’s take a look at it, historically, for the Raptors.
In 2005-2006, they finished 27-55, although they may well have avoided the 20-games-under stat had Chris Bosh not gotten hurt. They had the brutal 1-15 start, but then played around .500 ball the next couple months; but when Bosh went down, it was over, they lost 12 of the final 13 games, finally hitting the -20 mark at 26-46 on March 31.
That was a funny season in that expectations were, in a way, abnormally low; after all, Rob Babcock said before the season that the team would probably win less than the previous year (when they only won 33). So I don’t think you can call that record at all disappointing - it was expected.
In 2002-2003, the Raps went 24-58 in what I call “the lost season.” Everyone seems to have forgotten this season, not surprisingly; it was over quickly (-20 on January 10, when they were 8-28) and not much memorable happened. But it was a disappointing season in that, coming off three straight playoff appearances, we all expected a bounce-back season. But Vince Carter couldn’t stay on the floor, and even when he did play, he had lost the ability to put the team on his back. Antonio Davis, Jerome and Alvin Williams battled injuries, missing a combined 45 games, and the Raptors struggled just to fill the roster; they didn’t dress 12 players a single time. MoPete was the only Rap to appear in 80 games.
Going back, 1997-1998 was the low point in Raptors history; they didn’t even make it out of December before falling to -20. An unbearable 17-game losing streak had them at 2-22 on December 17th! The previous two years weren’t much better, as they hit -20 in March of 1997 and February of 1996. Those can be forgiven, as expansion years, of course, but the point I’m trying to make here, is that the current season now matches up with the worst seasons in this team’s short history.
What’s sad is that, unlike those years, there is no excuse this year. We’re not an expansion team. We didn’t lose a record number of games to injury. We didn’t start with a brand-new coach or GM and our GM didn’t lower expectations before the year started. We didn’t have a sad-sack roster without an all-star. In fact, we had, according to Bryan Colangelo, the best Raptors team ever assembled - one bona-fide all-star (Bosh), another former six-time all-star (JO), one guy on the cusp (Jose), and a number-one draft pick (Bargnani). We were expected - in fact, I think you can say we were ASSUMED - to be in the playoffs.
But we’re not. We’re about to go 20 games under .500. And given those expectations, and lack of excuses, I’m prepared to say that this might be the worst Raptors season ever.
Is there any chance the Raps can stave it off? They’ve got some easier opponents coming up, and Detroit’s not the same old Detroit, right? Well, they’re not, but that doesn’t make a difference. They’re still better than us at every position, unless Rasheed Wallace doesn’t play; even then, I think Jason Maxiell and Antonio McDyess will have no problem guarding Bosh and Bargnani. If they can take our two best players out of the game, what else do we have? As we’ve shown all year, not much.
I don’t want to say it’s hopeless, since as I indicated, the Pistons aren’t the same old Pistons (only 32-31), Rasheed is banged up, and Allen Iverson is on the shelf too (although I’d argue they’re better without him). But given the lack of interest the Raps have shown lately, and given that the Pistons, a team with some actual passion, are still fighting hard for playoff positioning (they’re in 6th, 2.5 back of Miami , and you better believe they want that #5 seed so they can avoid the Cavs, Celts and Magic in round one) I don’t see the Raps putting up much of a fight. Pistons by 17.
Incidentally, I just want to say, again, for the record, I will not be calling for Bryan Colangelo’s head in this space; yes, he’s made some bad moves, yes, this team has gotten worse the past two years. But if you seriously believe there is someone else out there available who could do better, please, let me know. In fact, if you think it’s all doom and gloom, I’m going to mention this:
In the past 10 years, including this one, the Raptors have been to the playoffs five times. Take a look at the rest of the league:
Cleveland: 4, including this year.
Boston: 6, including this year.
Orlando: 6, including this year.
Atlanta: 2, including this year.
Miami: 7, including this year.
Detroit: 9, including this year.
Philly: 7, including this year.
Milwaukee: 6, including this year.
Chicago: 3
New Jersey: 6
Charlotte: 0, in 5 seasons
Indiana: 7
New York: 3
Washington: 4
LA Lakers: 9, including this year.
San Antonio: 10, including this year.
Houston: 5, including this year.
Utah: 7, including this year.
New Orleans/Charlotte: 7, including this year.
Portland: 5, including this year.
Denver: 6, including this year.
Dallas: 9, including this year.
Phoenix: 7
Golden State: 1
Minnesota: 5
Seattle/OKC: 3
Memphis: 3
LA Clippers: 1
Sacramento: 7
The Raptors are tied for 16th in playoff appearances in the past 10 years. So middle of the pack. Is that good enough? Of course not. The fact that four of them were first-round exits hurts, a lot. But it could be worse - much, much worse. Reading some of the crap out there makes it sound like this is the end of the world or that Colangelo should be fired or the entire roster traded or whatever. You know what? Building a successful NBA team is not easy. It just isn’t. And, it takes time. Those “consistently good” teams are rare. Only one team has made the playoffs every year in the past 10: San Antonio. 3 more have 9 appearances. The next highest is seven. All that should tell you one thing: in a 30-team league, with a salary cap and free agency, it’s hard to maintain that high level of play. When the entire system is DESIGNED to keep teams “on an even ground,” those that have success are the exception, not the norm.
And you know what? We have a GM who’s still respected around the league (and has past success - unlike players, most GMs don’t get worse with age), we have a great arena, we have an ownership that has been willing to do everything except spend the luxury tax (which I think is reasonable). And we have the most passionate fans around. Would you rather we were just shaving salary without regards to wins, like Memphis (or even Phoenix)? Would you rather we had owners and GMs who don’t care/are incompetent, like the Clippers or T-Wolves? Would you rather our fans didn’t give a crap, like New Jersey or Atlanta?
I’m not saying that we, or the team, should be satisfied with what we’ve got. I’m not - I want more, absolutely. But when things get rough like this season has been, you can’t just focus on the negative. Looking at the bigger picture - which you simply must do when the smaller picture (this season) is so ugly - you can see this team still has things going for it, and that things could, in fact, be a lot worse.
Tags: Bryan Colangelo, Detroit Pistons, Toronto Raptors
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… and it wasn’t even that close.
Sigh. Another disappointing, yet not at all surprising effort. Sigh again.
I guess getting solid effort from everyone involved would be too much to ask. How is it that Bargnani, who had the flu, was the team’s best player? He started out strong and slowed down (11 in the first, 10 the rest of the way), but I think you could expect that from a guy who’s sick. What you’d also expect is for everyone else to pick it up for him. But no one did, the Raps were outscored by 15 in the second and it was over.
Man, our defense stinks. How do you shoot 53%, have all five starters in double figures, and still lose - and not even be close? Raps were outscored 92-74 through three quarters, and were still down 17 with 2:30 to go, which is when garbage time started. And how does Sam Dalembert - who, from published reports, Philly was about to throw in the doghouse, then padlock the doghouse shut for eternity - go for 19 and 13, with 3 blocks? The guy is a human foul machine with terrible footwork, yet he only had two PFs against us. Way to take it to him, guys! Argh.
Bright spots for the Raps, other than Bargnani’s hot start? Well, there were some transition opportunities, and Marion took advantage, scoring 18 on 7-12. Also questioned the team’s effort after the game, which is becoming a regular post-game staple. He’s definitely not wrong, but is anyone listening?
Hey, does anyone else think Marion is having a positive effect on Bargnani? I haven’t actually seen enough of the games (thanks, TSNFU!) but in the 10 since the trade, Bargnani’s averaging 21/6 on 51% shooting. Of course, they’re 2-8 in those games, but those are good numbers; he was averaging 16/6 on 38% shooting in the 10 pre-Marion games.
Of course, it’s just as likely that it’s plain old inconsistency that’s caused the spike. On the season, Bargnani’s still only averaging 16/5.4/44%. I guess I’ll take that, though I’ll note this: his per-36 stats are only marginally better than his rookie season - when the team was winning. Improvement? It’s a start, but I need more, especially in the W department.
Anyway, back to last night; it’s official, I am becoming a fan of Pops Mensah-Bonsu. Guy’s averaging 8 boards a night in 14 minutes! Of course, that’s in three losses, but still, I like the hustle. He pulled a post-game Marion himself, wondering about effort; not sure he’s in any place to do that, as the new guy who’s bounced around the league (and world) in the past year…
Still, the fact that the two newest guys are questioning other guys’ effort is pretty telling.
It’s not hard to guess who they’re talking about. I don’t know what is up with Chris Bosh this year. Only 4 rebounds, in 34 minutes? Really? Even last year when things weren’t going well I always thought he played hard. This year, he doesn’t seem to be into the games at all. And he’s clearly not stepping into the leadership role, otherwise guys wouldn’t be saying stuff like that.
It’s disappointing because I know Bosh is better than that. I know he’s got talent, and I know he’s got fire. Where is it? I want the Bosh from the past two years back! Where’s the guy that started the season out averaging 30 and 12, with 10 trips to the line a night? Bring him back!
Calderon is also bearing the brunt of a lot of frustration, and if I hear about that hamstring one more time, I’m sending him to Rocco Baldelli’s doctor. Seriously. I mean, we all knew he was a bad defender, but he’s been unbelievably awful this year; is that hamstring really to blame? And hey, what happened to the guy who would turn the corner off a screen every few times, to keep the D honest? I know he still shoots it well and I know he takes care of the ball - I love those traits about him. But we need more than that. We need a little fire, a little scrap, a little aggressiveness!
Still, I think the biggest disappointment has to be Jason Kapono. (Is that ’cause I said aloud, often, in the pre-season that he should be the starting 3, and he’s made me look like an ass? Absolutely. Nobody makes a fool of me!!)
Seriously, though, I always knew he was overpaid, but I had to assume a great pure shooter like that had a place on a team - especially a team of shooters like the Raps. And he seemed like he knew what he was doing out there, despite his physical limitations. Last year, I thought maybe Mitchell just didn’t know how to use him, and that with the tighter rotation (i.e., more minutes) and new big man (O’Neal), he’d find his niche.
That didn’t happen. Then Mitchell got axed and I thought, maybe Triano knows how to get him involved. Well, he had a couple good shooting nights in December, but has since regressed even more! Not only can’t Triano find a way to get him into the offense, the guy’s shooting is worse in all three categories than last year, despite averaging 6 more minutes!
If he was overpaid as a shooter - and now he can’t even do that - then he is utterly worthless. I mean, he does nothing else well. Nothing. I can’t believe we’re paying him $6 a year for the next two. How did BC not see that his success in 06-07 was purely due to Shaq and Wade drawing the defense all game long? I know that’s easy for me to say, and hindsight is 20/20, but as GM, isn’t it BC’s job to see these things?
Well, it’s officially the Raptors’ first sub-.500 season of BC’s Raptors career. I hope it hurts. It should. I hope it motivates him to clean house, to try extra hard this summer to turn it around.
Tags: Andrea Bargnani, Chris Bosh, Jason Kapono, Jose Calderon, Philadelphia 76ers, Toronto Raptors
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Sorry for the lack of recent updates; a vacation (to Vegas, where I did not bet on the Raptors) combined with the usual lackluster results from the Raptors haven’t left me the time or motivation to write. (It’s especially hard to analyze when 2 out of every 3 is on TSNFU. I’d love to know how that’s working out for them; I’m guessing they’re really pleased they backloaded the schedule. I assume they did that because they were expecting a playoff run, not the most disappointing season in Raptors history. No one’s pressuring Rogers now ‘cause no one gives a shit! So the joke’s on you, fuckers!)
Anyway, at least the past two losses, both of which I did not see a second of, appear to have been entertaining, close affairs, and that’s good - it’s a shame I missed them. The fact that they played a couple good teams fairly closely, combined with having a little break from following the team, was good for me - I am looking forward to watching the game tonight, even though I can’t imagine the Raps winning, simply because I haven’t seen a game in over a week and am jonesing a bit. Oh wait, I forgot… it’s on TSNFU. Sigh.
Philly is having a disappointing season of their own, though certainly nothing like Toronto’s - they’re at least in playoff contention and have been stayed around .500 all year. Still, they were expected to do better after signing Elton Brand last summer. Instead, they started slowly, fired the coach, and only picked up a little momentum when Brand got hurt. But they couldn’t even sustain that, and are 3-7 in their last 10.
Of course, as bad as that all sounds, I’m a Raptors fan, and can only wish the Raptors were having a similar season. Instead what we’ve got is so much worse.
As for the Raps, well, it’s clear that it’s time to give the young guys some serious burn. I’m talking specifically about Roko Ukic and Pops Mensah-Bonsu. Heck, maybe even Patrick O’Bryant. Now, I’m not advocating “shutting anyone down” or giving guys days off like Don Nelson. And honestly, that doesn’t even make sense because, for example, Roko’s never going to be a starter, so why would you start him? But, you do want him to be your primary backup in the future, so why not give these him a consistent 15-20 minutes a night now, let him play through his mistakes and see how he responds? Same with PMB and O’Bryant. You need to determine if these guys have the tools to be contributors, and now is the time to do it. Are these guys good enough to be the 6-8th men on the bench, or are they forever destined to be 9-12 material? And you don’t want another Roger Mason situation, where you never give the guy a chance (even though you had nothing else to play for) and you end up losing a prospect who goes on to become a quality starter.
Not only that, but, let’s see, we’re 23-41 playing Bosh, Bargnani, Jose and AP big minutes… putting some new player combos out there can’t possibly produce any worse results, can it?
I like what PMB has brought. 8.5 boards in 13 minutes? I’ll take that any day. Roko has proven he’s the only Raptor other than Joey that will consistently get to the rim; he needs to learn to finish there, but at least he’s not settling. And O’Bryant, well, he’s big, and he’s got enough potential to have been a #10 overall pick; he hasn’t shown anything in the pros yet, but this is the perfect opportunity for him to do so.
And, if these guys can, in fact, play, maybe that gives fans some optimism for the remaining month of play? Maybe it gives us a reason to care, or even be hopeful about the future?
Tags: Philadelphia 76ers, Toronto Raptors
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So, it’s the Raps’ final game on the West coast tonight, on TSN2 for us all to not see. Sigh. (I’m so tired of this ridiculousness, I don’t even have the energy to say “Fuck you, TSN” anymore, so I’m simply calling it TSNFU.)
Steve Nash remains questionable - he turned his ankle Tuesday and did not play last night, a 132-106 loss to the Lakers. Clearly, they’re not the same team without him, but I don’t think you can say this makes the Raptors’ job THAT much easier - a team trotting out Leandro Barbosa, Matt Barnes, Grant Hill, and Jason Richardson, not to mention the Big Shaqtus, still has more talent than the Raptors. And I will not soon forget how well Jared Dudley played against us in Charlotte, either, and in fact, I seem to recall more than a few second-tier (or lower) players having big nights against us the past two seasons, so look out for one of Alando Tucker, Louis Amundson or Robin Lopez to have a career game.
Gee, I’m not at all pessimistic, am I?
Still, even I have to admit, if ever there was a chance for the Raps to steal one from the Suns, it’ll be tonight. The Raps look to be as close to healthy as any team is this late in the season, only missing Humphries and maybe Joey Graham; and even though it’s a road game, they’re well-rested, having arrived Wednesday, while the Suns played on the road last night. The Suns have been team turmoil the past couple weeks, what with nearly trading Amare, nearly trading Shaq, firing their coach, and losing Amare to injury, while the Raps are finally starting to settle in with Shawn Marion, and have won two straight.
So yeah… this isn’t as hopeless as say, the last four trips to Phoenix, where the Raptors are 0-4 and have lost by an average of 14 points. The last victory? February 10, 2004. Vince Carter led the Kevin O’Neill Raptors to a 101-94 victory with 29 points, and MoPete added 7 three-pointers. (Ah, the good old days. That 101 may well have been a season-high in the O’Neill era!)
In fact, that game was the last victory against the Suns, home or away. Steve Nash rejoined the Suns following that 2004 season, and they’ve won nine straight against us since. Do we subconsciously lose to the Suns, in order to make Canada’s greatest basketball player ever look better? Well, if that’s the case, maybe his absence tonight will make a difference.
For the Raps, Shawn Marion has played well the past four games, doing a lot of little things while not making a huge impact on the score sheet. I think it’s been enough time that he’s ready to take more of a role in the offence; I know he can run the pick and roll with Calderon, and he actually, you know, does the “roll” portion of it (whereas, 95% of the time, Bosh and Bargnani just pop, rarely ever rolling to the hoop). If Shaq gets into any sort of foul trouble or needs a rest, the Raps should have a lot of open lanes to the hoop tonight. I know we’re not the Lakers, but LA dropped 60 points in the paint on the Suns last night, so Bosh, Bargnani and Marion should be able to get a lot of short-range opportunities.
For the Suns, it’ll either be Steve Nash or Leandro Barbosa at the point, and either one is obviously going to be a big concern for the Raps; Nash is Nash, he’ll be great, and Barbosa’s as fast as they come. Given José Calderon’s, um, “suspect” defense, I fear a lot of drive-and-dish for Nash or a lot of Barbosa blow-bys-for-layups tonight.
Either way, dribble penetration is going to be the key. If the Raps can limit it, they’ll have a chance. It’ll be a challenge - as you know, it’s a huge weakness for the Raps, and in Barbosa, J-Rich, Barnes, and even Hill, the Suns have guys that can break down a D off a dribble. But if the Raps can limit it, and not have an off-shooting ngiht of their own… is the upset possible?
The Suns are tired and shorthanded; the Raps are well-rested. As long as Toronto comes out looking energized - no 16-point deficits in the first quarter, please - I actually think they’ll be able to take this one. Raptors by 12.
Tags: Phoenix Suns, Shawn Marion, Steve Nash, Toronto Raptors
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Solid game last night against the T-Wolves. If they were any decent - and if they weren’t missing their best player - I’d be more impressed. As it is, an 8-point win against one of the few teams worse than the Raptors isn’t much to be impressed by.
Nor was Sunday’s win against the Knicks. Had they not been blown out by the 22-31 Knicks two days before - or had they taken it to the Knicks the same way - again, I’d feel better. As it is, they’re now 2-2 since the all-star break and batting .500 is not going to get this team into the playoffs.
But… at least the last two were entertaining. I mean, you knew they were going to lose to the Cavs last week. And I expected the Knicks to win on Friday night. But to lose by 30? And be down by 38? In the so-called mecca of basketball? Wow. That pretty much turned my stomach and made me not want to think about the Raptors for a while. I was pretty embarrassed to call myself a Raptors fan. I mean, I’ve said it a dozen times now, I don’t mind losing, I just want to be entertained. That was anything but.
Thankfully, as I said, the last two were different, and not just because the Raptors won. Both games had a good pace, and both games were close throughout. That’s enough on its own, but even better, the Raps got the win.
Last night it didn’t look good early though. I almost turned it off in disgust but stuck with it, I’m glad I did. I’m more than a little tired of all the incessant “this team is gonna run!” talk that’s been hovering around the Raps the last two weeks, because if anyone thinks this team is gonna run like the Suns or even the Warriors, they’re delusional. But what I saw from the second quarter on last night, I liked. The Raps didn’t fly up the court every possession, even when they got stops - they picked their spots and ran when it was available. Not only that, they didn’t force the issue on the break - quite a few baskets were scored on what might be called the “secondary break,” where the ball comes into the front court, slows, waits for the rest of the offensive players to catch up, then the ball goes to those players before the corresponding defensive players are set.
All in all, I felt like it was a good balance and I was very impressed at Calderon, Marion and Parker for generally making the right decision on the break opportunities. A lot of people have questioned whether Calderon is the right PG for a running team, if he plays like he did last night, then clearly he can handle it.
I was very impressed by Marion, despite his 5-15 shooting. He pulled in 8 boards handed out 3 assists and had 2 blocks. Not great numbers, but I feel like he did a lot more out there. He sure does know how to move the ball on offense, and not just in terms of swinging it; unlike every other Raptor, he didn’t wait til the defense pushed Bosh out to 15 feet to give him the ball, he actually dished to CB4 while CB4 was getting position 5 feet from the hoop. I really liked seeing that. He also moves well without the rock, and while that didn’t necessarily lead to scoring chances for him last night, it keeps the defense honest and I’m sure helped Bosh and Bargnani get to the hoop as often as they did. He also doesn’t give up on plays; he’s averaging over 3 offensive boards a game as a Raptor, and again, while that number isn’t sky-high, it’s more than we’re used to seeing around here. That can only be a good thing.
Now, it’s time for a tough stretch of games, as I alluded to last week. A three-game trip through Dallas, Phoenix, and Houston? Yikes.
Hey, beating the Suns isn’t impossible. They play the Lakers the night before, and Amare is out for the year. I’ll tell you this, if the Raptor offense runs as well as it did last night - and let’s be honest, the Suns aren’t a defensive juggernaut - that could be a high-scoring game, like in the 250-combined points range. I don’t know if the Raps have enough to come out on the high end of that one. Still, I hope it’s at least as entertaining as the last time these two teams met (when they combined for 230 in the Suns 4-point win).
Anyway, back to last night, one final concern for the Raps is that Joey Graham left the game with a bad hamstring. Now, I know it’s hard to imagine, but Joey has been a pretty key guy for the Raps the last few weeks! And since they’re essentially playing 8 guys and going “small” on a regular basis - with Joey at the 4 - this could put a cramp in their style. Will we see Marion at the four, with Kapono and Parker on the floor? We may have to if Joey is out for a long stretch. Voskuhl and O’Bryant are not going to contribute and Bosh and Bargnani can’t play 48. (Not that I, personally, have a problem with guys logging serious minutes now - after all, you gotta do what you gotta do to win, and if you don’t, you got a long, play-off-less offseason to rest. But sadly, Bosh and Jose in particular haven’t shown this year that they have the conditioning to play those kinds of minutes.)
Well, again, I’m glad the Raps gave us two entertaining games this week and I hope to see a couple more this weekend. I still feel like the playoffs are a virtual impossibility, but at the same time, I wouldn’t mind seeing them finish with 37 wins or so, which at least would be a little less embarrassing than say, 33.
Tags: Minnesota Timberwolves, Toronto Raptors
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Same old story, same old act
One step up, and two steps back.
–Bruce Springsteen, One Step Up
Well, it’s official, the summer of 2008 has gone down as one of the worst in Raptors history. Every player BC acquired (Adams, Solomon, O’Neal) is now gone. Didn’t even last a season. Unlike Ukic, a Babcock draftee signed this year, remains). As I was saying the other day, when BC makes a mistake, he cuts the cord, damn quick. Well, as long as that mistake’s name isn’t Andrea Bargnani.
When you consider that Jason Kapono has also been a complete bust, is it now fair to say that every move Toronto has made since the end of the ‘06-07 season has made the team worse? Obviously, the summer of 2006 was a winner - our step up - but the last two? Duds, our two steps back.
Let’s take a look at the moves, and also note, this is just a list of transactions, and doesn’t include the most ridiculous thing the Raps did in the summer of 2007: Allowing Jorge Garbajosa to play on a broken leg for the Spanish national team in an Olympic qualifying tournament (even though Spain had already qualified for the Olympics). Argh.
- Bad: Re-signed Sam Mitchell. Should have brought in his own guy when he had the chance.
- Bad: Let MoPete walk away
- Good: Traded for Delfino, but bad because he couldn’t be re-signed
- Bad: Signed Kapono
- Good: Signed Jamario, good, only because of the size of the contract - they absolutely got their money’s worth. It’s not Jamario’s fault that a CBA cast-off was the best option the team had at SF and he was forced to play 35 minutes a night.
- Meh: Picked up option on AB
- Meh: Picked up option at Joey, although we could have used that $2.5 million last summer
- Meh: Signed Hump. Not a bad deal for an 8th man
- Meh: Dixon-for-Brezec
- Bad: Bought out and released Garbo and his expiring contract. Bad. Awful. Terrible. Worst move he’s made.
- Bad: Traded Rasho, TJ, Baston and pick for O’Neal; not a bad deal at the time, but this grade is based on final results, and the results are a 21-34 record during O’Neal’s tenure. Very bad.
- Meh: Drafted Jawai; don’t expect much from second-rounders.
- Good: Signed Jose, although if he can’t stay healthy, this’ll change.
- Bad: Signed Adams; as a result of O’Neal’s fat deal, this is what they were limited to. But Adams couldn’t even play.
- Bad: Signed Solomon; but he was terrible and cost them at least two games single-handedly.
- Good: Signed Roko Ukic. Couple mil for a promising young PG, can’t go wrong.
- Bad: Fired Sam Mitchell. About a year and half too late, and this just made it obvious Sam was never his guy, so… why re-sign him?
- Meh: Signed Jake Voskuhl
- Meh: Dumped Adams
- TBD: Traded O’Neal, Moon and a pick for Marion and Banks.
- Meh: Dumped Solomon for O’Bryant.
So in the final analysis, he’s made about 21 moves; I think it’s safe to count about 8 of them as the “non-impact” type moves that teams make all the time (like signing Hump to an extension): the “Meh” moves, that neither hurt nor help the team.
As for the others? Some may have seemed good at the time, but in the end, there’s only four that I count as good moves - and two of those are no longer with the team. (Not only that, but Delfino and Jamario both got bad raps - Delfino never got consistent PT and had his minutes jerked around, and Moon had to play so far over his head, he ended up hurting the team as much as helping it.)
Four moves, out of 21, that made the team better. Eight that had no impact. And eight that made them worse. Oh, and one TBD (the Marion trade).
Now, obviously, no GM has a perfect record and I don’t expect BC to have one either - not every move is going to work out. Some will fail, that’s the nature of this thing. And of course his record in his first year was pretty good. But still… you wanna be batting at least .500, don’t you? This is not good, folks.
Again, I’m not calling for Colangelo to be fired or Bosh to be traded or any of that crazy crap. I just consider it a slump, albeit an extended one; I have confidence that he will break out of it and start making some solid moves. And enough with the “we don’t have anything to make moves with!” Look at the Knicks, one year after Isiah left - a completely different team and who the hell wanted anyone from that crap pile? It can be done. It will be done. That’s what this summer is all about. In the meantime…
Well, in the meantime, we’ve got 26 games remaining in this here season. Each loss puts the playoffs further and further out of reach, and even though, technically, the Raps are still only five-and-a-half games back, realistically… there’s no chance. Look at the next 10 games:
@New York
New York
Minnesota
@Phoenix
@ Dallas
@ Houston
Miami
Utah
@ Philly
Detroit
Sure, the Knicks are struggling and the T-Wolves are not very good, so three straight wins isn’t impossible - although I think a split with New York is more likely.
But then it’s seven straight against +.500 teams. Yikes. Sure, the final 16 are a little easier - only 3 against +.500 teams - but still… that’s tough. I’d say the Raptors need to beat NY twice, Minny, Houston, Miami, Philly and Detroit to have a chance. That’s right, they need to go 7-3.
Yeah, that’s not happening. Throw in the fact that the Bulls and Knicks - both currently ahead of the Raps - improved their teams on deadline day, and Milwaukee and New Jersey are chugging along at slow-but-still-better-than-the-Raptors paces…
I can see Charlotte and Indiana falling back behind us, but the rest? That is one tough, uphill climb.
Anyway, enough about all that. Back to the action! It will be nice to finally see Marion play, and to see the Raps with their full lineup, and to see, well, the game - it’s on regular TSN! Hallelujah!
First meeting between these teams this year, and the Knicks, although they only have one more win than the Raptors, are a feel good story because no one expected them to win much at all (whereas the Raps are a huge disappointment). Donny Walsh has done a good job of acquiring players that fit D’Antoni’s system, much the same way that Colangelo did in Phoenix (conversely, since we have no system here, it’s harder to find the right kinds of players!). They run, they score, they’re aggressive in transition, and well, those are things that the Raptors are weak at. Could be a long night!
I just have to hope that the injection of Marion, and the Knicks’ lack of defense, can keep the Raptors in this one. But in the end, it’ll be the Knicks. By 9.
Tags: Bryan Colangelo, New York Knicks, Shawn Marion, Toronto Raptors
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