Tuesday, May 7, 2024

10 Things: With Nick Nurse fired, Masai Ujiri now becomes the focus with Raptors






Here is the second part of a two-part series on the 10 trends worth noting from the Toronto Raptors‘ 2022-23 season. For thoughts 1 through 5, click here. 

6. Nick Nurse is good with tactics, but the job is so much more.

Two things can be true at once: coach Nick Nurse was given a flawed roster and he also didn’t bring the best out of the group. He is a creative tactician who should always be appreciated for his part in the championship, but this season was a reminder that X’s and O’s are just one aspect of the job. Being the smartest guy in the room isn’t worth much if you’re unable to inspire anyone in that room. 

Nurse’s unprompted and public preview of his upcoming exit in the midst of a playoff race was the last blunder that upset everyone from players to management and staff. His message was falling on deaf ears for months, and it was damning to hear president Masai Ujiri talk about the lack of accountability and culture after his firing.

The players held a team meeting six weeks into the season, and Ujiri himself had to lay into the team on a number of occasions, according to Sportsnet colleague Michael Grange, but isn’t that the coach’s responsibility? And, sure, the Raptors started poorly and suffered a few injuries, but did they ever find any consistency? The fourth-quarter collapses, the predictable and stagnant offense, the incessant double teams that opposing stars openly bragged about beating – where exactly were the brilliant solutions? More importantly, who was still in his corner after all the benchings, inconsistent minutes and public callouts? Even the assistant coaches seemed to be split, according to Grange, so is it a surprise that the players didn’t all buy in if he couldn’t even get it from his own staff?













The trouble with the smart-guy shtick is that you have to keep coming up with new ideas. The evidence of Nurse’s brilliance is in how the rest of the league copies his moves. He will always be known for playing a box-and-one against Stephen Curry in the NBA Finals, but three years later the Golden State Warriors used it on Fred VanVleet. Nurse also reintroduced other zone coverages, which ironically became the best and most consistent way to neuter Toronto’s bench lineups. Last season, Nurse pressed hard on the offensive rebounding, but now the whole league is going after the glass.

So what was the new gimmick this season? The Raptors leaned harder into inflating the margins by gambling for more steals and chasing more offensive rebounds, but continued to lose the bulk of the actual game. Toronto made 737 more field-goal attempts than its opponents, more than double the next closest team, at plus-344, but this overwhelming advantage didn’t matter because it was also third-worst in effective field-goal percentage on offense and second-worst on defense. They had a plan to win the possession battle, but where were the answers for how the Raptors were going to score and how they were going to force misses?













Firing Nurse doesn’t solve everything on its own, but it’s a chance to improve. Nurse took over only five years ago, but only five coaches had more tenure. Change comes with the job; Ujiri said the point of the firing was partly made to “shock” the system. The reality is that the team needed a new voice with or without major roster moves to follow. Ujiri spoke of accountability, role definition, a lack of togetherness, the loss of culture; that all points to the need for improving how people were managed. 

7. Is this all there is with Gary Trent Jr.?

When the Raptors flipped Norman Powell for Gary Trent Jr. three seasons ago, the move was met with confusion. Powell was a fan favourite, but his play was up and down – a reliable finisher when he was set up to score, but just average at getting his own, and rarely assisted others. That skillset worked with starters, delivering an efficient 20 points in that role, but his production tailed off in the second unit, and without his volume scoring, he brought little else to the table. In acquiring Trent, the Raptors traded players but maintained the same dilemma.

The hope was that Trent could develop into something more. He developed a reputation in Portland as a dogged defender – most notably in the Bubble – and he was a younger player who was blocked by two established veterans. Bringing him to Toronto with the intent of re-signing him to a short-term deal created the chance to showcase something new.

Trent lacked the burst that made Powell effective in transition and at the rim, but he was a better shooter, had more craft in the midrange, and if his defensive impact was sustainable, the path to an upgrade was there. To start last season, Trent combined efficient scoring with disruptiveness on defense, where he was tops in the league in deflections and steals because he would so voraciously attack the ball, but that zeal faded as the year went on and did not come back this season.

At the end of it, Trent was specifically targeted on defense by the Chicago Bulls in the play-in game, just as he was in Game 6 by the Philadelphia 76ers in the previous playoff run. When teams had more time to scout and prepare for the Raptors, their conclusion was to attack Trent, and they were right.

Nurse drew a hard line with Trent this season. “We want him to be a disruptor. He kinda fits us if he does that, and if he doesn’t, he doesn’t fit us,” Nurse said. And while it was just the one of many needlessly crass callouts by Nurse, it was right on the money. If Trent committed himself on the defensive end, he wouldn’t be a one-dimensional scorer, which was deemed secondary even on a team bereft of offense, with Nurse benching him twice in the span of three months. It didn’t quite make sense when Trent was demoted for Juancho Hernagomez, who was cut at the deadline simply to make space on the roster that was vacant for weeks until Will Barton, of all people, showed up.

But the starting five produced much better results when Trent was benched a second time with the arrival of Jakob Poeltl, who stabilized the group on defense. No matter how many times Nurse went out of his way to highlight Trent’s professionalism, his lineup decisions said it all. And while that might leave a sting in Trent’s mind as he decides on his future as a free agent, the same dilemma will exist no matter where he goes. His value as a sixth man is there – just look at Powell making $90 million for five years in L.A. – but until he adds more to his game, the Raptors can take it or leave it.













8. Precious Achiuwa is talented, but his growth stalled.

Toward the end of the season, Scottie Barnes decided to spice up his transition dunks by sprinkling in a handful of 360s. But when asked if he was the best dunker on the team, Barnes passed the honor to Precious Achiuwa, despite his own 40-inch vertical dominating the highlights. And while dunks are a very flashy and mostly cosmetic form of athleticism, Achiuwa has every form you could ask for. He has quick twitch to go zero to 60, glides both going downhill or moving laterally, is able to stop on a dime, and combines both leaping and sheer power to play through contact. On a team specifically curated for athleticism, Achiuwa still stands out among the group, which is what makes him the second-best prospect on the team behind Barnes despite other holes in his game.

Where there is an abundance of ability, there is a question of how best to translate it into results. Achiuwa has been at both ends of the spectrum in his three seasons. As a rookie in Miami, he was strictly limited to rebounding, defence, and if he didn’t nail the basics, he would not see the floor. When he moved to Toronto, where Ujiri gleefully recalled telling him “You are mine now” after the trade, Achiuwa has been encouraged to branch out and dabble. Nurse encouraged him to bring the ball up, to shoot with a green light from three, and to even attack in isolation, so long as he played defense at a premium position that the Raptors sorely lacked before Poeltl’s arrival. Often you would see mistakes, some that were elementary and uncommon at the NBA level, but rarely was Achiuwa benched for biting off more than he could chew.

This approach seemed to suit his nature, as Achiuwa is never short on confidence and his zeal for making plays never wavered, no matter the result.








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But for a team looking to win, the mistakes do actually matter, and that was the story of Achiuwa’s season. It started with Nurse calling Achiuwa the most likely breakout candidate last off-season. But less than a month into the campaign, Nurse was already calling him out before a fateful game against the Houston Rockets on account of his poor defense.

Unfortunately, Achiuwa suffered the first prolonged injury of his career that night, and it knocked him out for six weeks, but the chance at redemption was there upon his return. Achiuwa was promoted to the starting lineup when O.G. Anunoby was sidelined, which led to his best stretch of the season, including a standout 27-point outburst against the Portland Trail Blazers.

However, when the Raptors got healthy and added a centre at the trade deadline, Achiuwa was knocked back to the reserves, where his performance plummeted until he was a healthy scratch. There were times where he was so lost on the very basics of the sport on both sides of the ball that you couldn’t help but wonder if he was struggling to maintain his focus. In the play-in, Achiuwa appeared for only nine minutes, where he was a minus-9, which was a sharp decline as compared to the 28 minutes per game that he averaged against Philadelphia last season.

Achiuwa will benefit from structure more than anyone else on the team. There should be space left for him to explore his talents, but the priorities in his role need to be on screening, rebounding, defense and making the right reads on offense. The goal isn’t to deny his aggressiveness, but to align it with how he can best influence winning. It’s not a coincidence that the only stretch of positive play was when he played with the starters, because that’s the only group that had a clear idea of what they were doing.

Achiuwa is a hardworking player who is routinely seen getting in extra work after practices, and it did translate to tangible improvements in his paint efficiency, even if his three-point shot remains a work in progress. The more that the Raptors define his role, the better both he and the team will be. 

9. Vision 6-9 is clearly lacking in guard skills.

The whole idea of running a team of interchangeable forwards came about as a response to the explosion of perimeter talent. Without the option to switch pick-and-rolls, teams would inevitably run into the unsolvable problem of having to assign extra defenders to cover mismatches while also sprinting out to cover the three-point line. The Warriors’ signature small-ball lineup attacked this dichotomy on both ends of the floor, as do their closest challengers in the Boston Celtics, as well as the L.A. Clippers and other challengers. In that sense, Toronto’s “Vision 6-9” strategy wasn’t unique except that it lacked the very offensive threat that this strategy was built to counter.

The biggest weakness of the Raptors going on three seasons is an absence of shooting. In a league where five-out offenses are increasingly common, the Raptors struggle to even play three-out. An injury to Otto Porter Jr. should never be devastating since it’s inevitable, and yet his absence led to the Raptors constantly being one shooter short. Siakam and Barnes were first and third in shot attempts, and both players launched more from the dreaded midrange than from three. That is acceptable if they’re putting pressure on the paint and drawing extra defenders, but the Raptors couldn’t convert on their kickouts. Toronto ranked 26th in both makes and percentage on catch-and-shoot threes.

Or put it another way: In a year where the league average three-point percentage was 37.7 per cent, Anunoby was the only one to exceed it, at 38.7 percent. It’s possible that the team-wide struggles with shooting could be attributed to a poor system that didn’t create the best looks overall, the simple fact is that many players struggle to shoot. All you would need to do is attend warmups before any game to see that all but three players (Anunoby, VanVleet, Trent) are inconsistent, even without a defender present. 

Beyond the need across the board for shooting, the Raptors also lack another playmaker to generate offense off the bench. The starting five played great, but the level of play began to drop with each successive reserve that was introduced. In lineups to open the second and fourth quarters, it was essentially just starters being overextended with more usage rather than a backup option changing the pace of the game. Malachi Flynn, Jeff Dowtin, and Dalano Banton have gotten a few looks, but all they did was defer. The last-minute addition of Will Barton in the buyout market was so obviously a band-aid to a bigger problem. In the past, the Raptors had success with putting two pick-and-roll threats on the floor at the same time to constantly pressure the rim and create kickouts. The talent isn’t there now to replicate that.

What’s notable is that the Raptors have generally struggled to find productive players off the bench for several seasons. In the championship season, VanVleet was up and down as the main reserve until he caught fire in the latter rounds, while Anunoby had the worst season of his career as a reserve before succumbing to injuries. The following season, it was Powell who struggled in carrying the bench. This time, Achiuwa and Trent saw their productivity drop. That points to a systemic flaw that needs to be addressed, in addition to bringing in more talent. 













10. The buck ultimately stops with Masai Ujiri and no one else.

The timing of Ujiri’s season-ending media conference was rather fortunate. Without the news of Nurse’s firing to dig into, the focus and attention would have been on Ujiri’s part in assembling this flawed roster and the loss of culture on his watch. Removing Nurse made sense for all the reasons he said publicly and for more reasons that remained unspoken but, as Ujiri said, he takes responsibility for this season.

The first order of business will be finding a new coach. The hope is that this new leader can win the trust and respect of the players, and restore accountability. That will take someone who can clearly communicate expectations to players and to hold both the players and themselves honest to what is agreed upon. A new system would also be welcome, especially with regards to getting the best out of this group defensively. But it will take more than a new voice to get everything in line.

As Ujiri said this week, his approach with Nurse was to hire people and let them do his job, but maybe he needed to be around the team and speak up more often.













As for the roster, the safe bet is that Ujiri will stick with the same strategy of building through the middle. The time to bottom out was at the trade deadline, when the Raptors were four games under .500 with a possible shot at top-six lottery odds, but Ujiri chose to add. The thought process with adding Poeltl is that he was a top-10 centre who was available for a first-round pick, and so the price being right superseded the timing being wrong.

In a nutshell, that is middle approach of accumulating assets, and it will likely inform how Ujiri approaches his key free agents. So long as the Raptors can re-sign Poeltl, VanVleet and perhaps Trent to positive-value contracts, it makes sense to keep the asset. Even if they let everyone walk, there is no path to meaningful cap room, and Ujiri noted that star players are now signing extensions and then asking for trades rather than entertaining free agency. That means the Raptors will need to have appealing players to deal if they want to be in position to make the next Kawhi Leonard trade.













That doesn’t rule out the potential of a trade to balance the roster. The Raptors badly need more guard depth, so a trade involving one of their many bench forwards would make sense. If Ujiri doesn’t see value in signing Anunoby and Pascal Siakam to their upcoming extensions, moving one of them with a year left on their deals would be wise. Better yet, if a star were to ask out as Kevin Durant and Donovan Mitchell did last summer, the Raptors should feel much less attached than they a year ago. But don’t be surprised if the same group is brought back. Ujiri’s history says he is pragmatic and patient, above all else.

The lifeblood of the Raptors is player development, and that’s the biggest concern that needs to be addressed if there is to be any upward trajectory. When the biggest success stories in a year is Dowtin and Christian Koloko showing the potential to maybe fill backup roles, that is a massive red flag. The Raptors can’t keep repeating the same old stories of Anunoby, Siakam and VanVleet growing into starters from low draft positions from seven years ago. Take Anunoby, for example. He was drafted 23rd in 2017 and, six years later, reports are that the Raptors wouldn’t accept less than three firsts for him.

That’s the value of player development, but would the Raptors break even with some of their recent selections? Would Malachi Flynn return the 29th pick it took to acquire him? Would Koloko get a 33rd? Dalano Banton for a 46th? Barnes gets you the fourth pick in this year’s draft, but definitely not one or two.

The whole process needs to be evaluated — from scouting and analytics, to player acquisition, to skill development, to coaching strategy — because this is the foundation of the franchise.



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References:

By: William Lou
Title: 10 Things: With Nick Nurse fired, Masai Ujiri now becomes the focus with Raptors
Sourced From: www.sportsnet.ca/nba/article/10-things-with-nick-nurse-fired-masai-ujiri-now-becomes-the-focus-with-raptors/
Published Date: 04-24-2023


Frequently Asked Questions

What was the first year of existence of the Toronto Raptors in 1985?

The Toronto Raptors' first season in the NBA was a difficult one. Isiah Thomas became GM and hired Brendan Malone as head coach of the new Raptors franchise in 1995, and the team soon acquired several talented players in the draft and through trades. They defeated the mighty Chicago Bulls once that season, but overall they finished with a 21-61 win-loss record.

Toronto drafted Marcus Camby (Rookie of The Year) in 1996. Camby joined the Toronto starting line-up along with Alvin Williams at guard. Damon Stoudamire was traded later in 1997. Toronto made more roster changes over the years to ensure future success.

Despite all the changes, Toronto struggles through its first few NBA seasons. Toronto made its first playoff appearance in 2000 after years of rebuilding and transition. However, it lost the series to New York Knicks.


What is the longest time that the Raptors have been together?

Toronto Raptors is an NBA basketball franchise. In 1995, the NBA added the Raptors to its expansion roster along with the Vancouver Grizzlies. The Grizzlies relocated to Memphis, Tennessee, in 2001-02, making the Raptors the only Canadian-based team in the NBA.

Toronto Raptors' home games are played at Scotiabank Arena. The Maple Leafs is the NHL team from Toronto, and also uses the arena. Since their inception in 1921, the Raptors have played in the NBA playoffs thirteen times. Their most recent appearance was in 2021 when they were defeated in six games by the Philadelphia 76ers.

1999-2000 saw the Raptors make their first playoff appearance. They were defeated by the New York Knicks, division rivals, in the first round.

The team was boring and there were very few fans. There was nothing to root for or watch, and no one knew why anyone cared. After years of being mediocre, the team made a decision to improve its image and make it more appealing to the general public.

In 2001, the team hired a professional advertising agency to help develop a marketing strategy that would make them famous in national markets. Their slogan was "Hear Us Roar!"

The slogan was created to advertise the fact that all the games had been sold out. All they needed was a catchy phrase and a great logo to go along with it. This is where creative genius shines through. They combined the phrase "hear them roar" with another well-known saying, "never let go." This became the Toronto Raptors' official motto.


When was the Raptors' inaugural game?

The Raptors hosted their first ever regular season match against the New Jersey Nets on November 3, 1995 at the SkyDome. 33,306 fans were in attendance to watch Alvin Robertson score the first points in franchise history. The Raptors beat the Nets, 94-79, thanks to contributions from Damon Stoudamire (10 assists and 10 points) and Robertson (30 point plays).


When was the Raptors' first playoff series won?

Toronto won their inaugural playoff series when they defeated New York 3-1 in 2001. They reached the Eastern Conference semifinals in 2001 for the first and only time under Lenny Wilkens.


What was the Raptors best year?

The 2019 championship season was Toronto Raptors’ best year. It was a thrilling, memorable season for Toronto Raptors. The Raptors won their first NBA Championship in franchise history. Kawhi Leonard was named Finals MVP after the team posted a record of 58-24 during the regular season. They beat the Golden State Warriors in six games and took home the title.

The Toronto Raptors made a change in 2013 when they replaced Bryan Colangelo (then general manager) with Masai Ujiri. This was a major change for the franchise, and would lead to a new era that would see them one of the most successful teams in the NBA.

The Raptors under Ujiri enjoyed a resurgence and reached the playoffs in 2014. This was their first playoff appearance since 2008. The Raptors have won five Division titles, and they had their most successful regular-season in 2018. Ujiri also made a risky, but profitable trade that year and sent DeMar DeRozan over to the San Antonio Spurs in exchange for Kawhi Leonard.

The Raptors had an amazing 2019, winning their first conference championship and reaching the NBA finals for a record-breaking second time. They conquered the Golden State Warriors in a total of six games.

Ujiri's tenure as a Raptors player has been a huge success and should be recognized for changing the Raptors' fortunes. The Raptors are now among the best in the NBA and look poised for greatness for the future.

The 2019 Raptors championship season will always be remembered as one among the best in their history.

Ujiri and other members of the Toronto Raptors team should keep their eyes on the future and work hard to create a winning culture that supports both players and employees. This team is looking brighter with their continued dedication to excellence. The 2019 Toronto Raptors Championship season has set a high bar, and Ujiri and his teammates must build on this success.


Statistics

  • This improved during the 2006–07 regular season to an average of 18,258 fans (13th in the league), 92.2 percent capacity at the Air Canada Centre. (en.wikipedia.org)
  • This improved during the 2006–07 regular season to an average of 18,258 fans (13th in the league), 92.2 percent capacity at the Air Canada Centre. (en.wikipedia.org)
  • By 2018, estimated the Raptors were worth $1.4 billion, 12th in the NBA. (en.wikipedia.org)
  • After Thomas attempted to execute a letter of intent with Slaight to purchase the team failed, he resigned from his position in November and sold his 9 percent stake in the team to Slaight. (en.wikipedia.org)
  • As predicted by analysts, the team easily secured a berth in the 2001 NBA playoffs with a franchise-high 47 wins. (en.wikipedia.org)

External Links

sportingnews.com/ca

jerseymuseum.org

nba.com/raptors

assets1.sportsnet.ca/basketball/nba/teams/toronto-raptors

How To

How to get the Toronto Raptors from your location

Toronto Raptors games are at Air Canada Centre. (ACC) is located in downtown Toronto Ontario, Canada. TTC Metro system takes you to ACC. Union Station takes about 30 minutes to get to ACC. The closest stop to ACC is Bay Street station.

Bay street station is best if you're coming to ACC from Union Station. Follow the signs to ACC from there. If you are arriving at ACC from a different direction, please follow the signs for Bay Street station.

Follow the signs to the ACC from Bay Street Station.

The venue is accessible to people with disabilities. For those with disabilities, there are designated seating areas. The ACC also offers sign language interpretation services.

There is no parking fee at the ACC. There is however limited street parking nearby.



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The Toronto Raptors’ roster is going to look much different at the end of the offseason, as Masai Ujiri is likely well aware of how poorly the team performed




10 Things: With Nick Nurse fired, Masai Ujiri now becomes the focus with Raptors


Morning Coffee – Thu, Apr 20

Let's all pile on Nurse as he was the only problem with this team | Tough decisions to make on VanVleetThe post Morning Coffee – Thu, Apr 20 first appeared on




10 Things: With Nick Nurse fired, Masai Ujiri now becomes the focus with Raptors


Raptors Lottery odds: What are the chances of landing the No. 1 pick?

The Toronto Raptors can finally put what looked like cursed season behind them as they try to get the team back on a path to contention in 2023. Rather than




10 Things: With Nick Nurse fired, Masai Ujiri now becomes the focus with Raptors


NBA rumors: Nick Nurse to Rockets buzz starting to die down?

The Toronto Raptors may be in for a coaching change after tears of stability, as Nick Nurse might be on his way out of town following a disappointing 41-41

10 Things: With Nick Nurse fired, Masai Ujiri now becomes the focus with Raptors

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10 Things: With Nick Nurse fired, Masai Ujiri now becomes the focus with Raptors

Nick Nurse’s future, a possible rebuild, and Canada Basketball w/ Michael Grange & Samson Folk

Samson Folk is joined by Michael Grange to discuss the latest in Raptors news, Canada basketball, and the league at large.The post Nick Nurse’s future, a




10 Things: With Nick Nurse fired, Masai Ujiri now becomes the focus with Raptors


A Season We’d Love to Forget – Confederacy of Dunks

On our season finale, we're talking about potential playoff upsets, players who should ref, Raptors who should and shouldn't be on the move, and slogans for

10 Things: With Nick Nurse fired, Masai Ujiri now becomes the focus with Raptors

Raptors news: Gary Trent Jr. vague on Toronto return, Fred VanVleet challenges Scottie Barnes

The Toronto Raptors face the possibility of losing Fred VanVleet, Jakob Poeltl, and Gary Trent Jr. in what promises to be a very important offseason. While he




10 Things: With Nick Nurse fired, Masai Ujiri now becomes the focus with Raptors


Morning Coffee – Wed, Apr 19

Raptors have a lot to do this summer | Siakam voted 3rd most overrated player in the NBA (by other players) | O.G. invest in British BasketballThe post Morning

10 Things: With Nick Nurse fired, Masai Ujiri now becomes the focus with Raptors

Raptors’ Pascal Siakam called second-most overrated NBA player in poll

In a tale as old as time, yet another story has come out that either calls a Toronto Raptors star overrated or disrespects them. In this case, it’s




10 Things: With Nick Nurse fired, Masai Ujiri now becomes the focus with Raptors


Raptors: Joel Embiid calling out Nick Nurse is laughably ironic

While Nick Nurse and the Toronto Raptors are licking their wounds and figuring out where to put the blame at home, Joel Embiid and the rival Philadelphia 76ers




10 Things: With Nick Nurse fired, Masai Ujiri now becomes the focus with Raptors


What went wrong for the Raptors, and can they fix it?

The Raptors have much to fix on the roster. It's going to be tough.The post What went wrong for the Raptors, and can they fix it? first appeared on Raptors

10 Things: With Nick Nurse fired, Masai Ujiri now becomes the focus with Raptors

3 Raptors who deserve blame after disheartening play-in exit

Very few teams in the NBA can claim to have had a more disappointing season than the Toronto Raptors, who were very quickly dispatched from the play-in

10 Things: With Nick Nurse fired, Masai Ujiri now becomes the focus with Raptors

Toronto Raptors News, Scores, Status, Schedule - NBA

Get the latest news and information for the Toronto Raptors. 2022 season schedule, scores, stats, and highlights. Find out the latest on your favorite NBA

10 Things: With Nick Nurse fired, Masai Ujiri now becomes the focus with Raptors

Morning Coffee – Tue, Apr 18

O.G. got some DPOY votes but likely not all-defensive team | Banton has one more year to earn it | Lots of decisions to be madeThe post Morning Coffee – Tue,

10 Things: With Nick Nurse fired, Masai Ujiri now becomes the focus with Raptors

NBA rumors: 5 teams interested in trading for OG Anunoby revealed

The Toronto Raptors will head into the 2022 offseason with plans to finally shake up their roster. Despite leading the league in steals per game, the latest




10 Things: With Nick Nurse fired, Masai Ujiri now becomes the focus with Raptors


Raptors’ play-in loss has a small silver lining that will help the franchise

The Raptors choked away a 15-point lead to a mediocre Chicago Bulls team led offensively by Zach LaVine and defensively by Diar DeRozan. It was an embarrassing




10 Things: With Nick Nurse fired, Masai Ujiri now becomes the focus with Raptors


Fred VanVleet’s jumper was the Raptors season

Failures, walking hand in hand.The post Fred VanVleet’s jumper was the Raptors season first appeared on Raptors Republic

10 Things: With Nick Nurse fired, Masai Ujiri now becomes the focus with Raptors

Morning Coffee – Mon, Apr 17

Scottie needs to do better and work harderThe post Morning Coffee – Mon, Apr 17 first appeared on Raptors Republic

10 Things: With Nick Nurse fired, Masai Ujiri now becomes the focus with Raptors

Raptors mailbag: Trading Pascal Siakam, drafting Scoot Henderson and moving on from Diar DeRozan

In a jam-packed edition of the Raptors mailbag, fans ask about the play-in loss and the team’s off-season plans.




10 Things: With Nick Nurse fired, Masai Ujiri now becomes the focus with Raptors


A group chat convo on the offseason – Pull up Tre

Samson Folk & Trevon Heath are joined by some friends to discuss the Raptors finish to the season and what they plan to do now that it's over.The post A group

10 Things: With Nick Nurse fired, Masai Ujiri now becomes the focus with Raptors

Season’s End with Freddie Rivas – Buckets & Tea NBA Show

Host Cathryn Naiker brings back Freddie Rivas to help her breakdown what is next for the North.The post Season’s End with Freddie Rivas – Buckets & Tea NBA

10 Things: With Nick Nurse fired, Masai Ujiri now becomes the focus with Raptors

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10 Things: With Nick Nurse fired, Masai Ujiri now becomes the focus with Raptors

Morning Coffee – Fri, Apr 14

Depressing end of season availability that gave us more questions than answersThe post Morning Coffee – Fri, Apr 14 first appeared on Raptors Republic




10 Things: With Nick Nurse fired, Masai Ujiri now becomes the focus with Raptors


The bet on shooting development in Toronto

Was it ever true?The post The bet on shooting development in Toronto first appeared on Raptors Republic

10 Things: With Nick Nurse fired, Masai Ujiri now becomes the focus with Raptors

Morning Coffee – Thu, Apr 13

Raptors squander a second straight year with a fucking depressing end to a fucking depressing and fucking confusing season with a fucking pitiful performance

10 Things: With Nick Nurse fired, Masai Ujiri now becomes the focus with Raptors

Quick Reaction: Bulls 109, Raptors 105

Toronto's season comes to an end with their defeat to the Chicago Bulls in the play-in game.The post Quick Reaction: Bulls 109, Raptors 105 first appeared on

10 Things: With Nick Nurse fired, Masai Ujiri now becomes the focus with Raptors

Raptors mailbag: Dalano Banton, Nick Nurse and the inner workings of a basketball reporter

In the final mailbag of the regular season, Doug Smith answers questions about some Raptors futures and what goes into reporting.




10 Things: With Nick Nurse fired, Masai Ujiri now becomes the focus with Raptors


Ye Olde Mailbag: What’s going on between the Raptors and Nick Nurse?

It’s a jam-packed Raptors mailbag this week, with lots of questions from fans about the future of coach Nick Nurse.

10 Things: With Nick Nurse fired, Masai Ujiri now becomes the focus with Raptors

Ye Olde Mailbag: Carlisle's Canadian tribute, sign-and-trades and the best of sports

Thoughts on the cost of "building a brand: and making quotes always make sense

10 Things: With Nick Nurse fired, Masai Ujiri now becomes the focus with Raptors

Ye Olde Mailbag: In-season Raptors trades, a bit of March Madness and what's up with Zion?

A bit of the Poeltl impact on Siakam and the roster looking into the future plus one on Basketball Canada's ultimate roster

10 Things: With Nick Nurse fired, Masai Ujiri now becomes the focus with Raptors

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10 Things: With Nick Nurse fired, Masai Ujiri now becomes the focus with Raptors

Kyle Lowry, Russell Westbrook and, of course, Raptors playing time in Ye Olde Mailbag

Is an in-season "blockbuster" trade a possibility? What we do here and rugby vs. football round out the offerings

10 Things: With Nick Nurse fired, Masai Ujiri now becomes the focus with Raptors

Ye Olde Mailbag: Raptors point guards, Nash's future and Koloko's start

Is drawing charges a part of a bigger defensive package plus starting to think about the long-term Raptors outlook

10 Things: With Nick Nurse fired, Masai Ujiri now becomes the focus with Raptors

Time to pump the brakes on SGA to the Raptors and other fun mailbag questions

Raptors family visitors, where Canada fits into the big global picture and finding someone to step up in difficult times

10 Things: With Nick Nurse fired, Masai Ujiri now becomes the focus with Raptors

The World Cup and the Raptors rotation take over Ye Olde Mailbag this week

Who should play more, or less, when the Raptors are back to full strength -- if they ever are -- is a burning issue, it seems




10 Things: With Nick Nurse fired, Masai Ujiri now becomes the focus with Raptors


Changing the games, underachieving Raptors and Brampton rules in Ye Olde Mailbag

No mall visits, some theatre memories and, of course, 'Are there trades to be made by the Raptors?' fill out the questions

10 Things: With Nick Nurse fired, Masai Ujiri now becomes the focus with Raptors

Raptors on-court chatter and off-court health issues in Ye Olde Mailbag

A question about stats and what everything means and, yes, where is Scottie Barnes in the grand scheme of this season

10 Things: With Nick Nurse fired, Masai Ujiri now becomes the focus with Raptors

Ye Olde Mailbag: Scottie Barnes, a trip down memory lane and secret signals

Plus a thought about the Raptors starting lineup and a unique baseball trade condition

10 Things: With Nick Nurse fired, Masai Ujiri now becomes the focus with Raptors

Sports can help us grow, how the league gets its fine money and more in Ye Olde Mailbag

Panic time? No, it's not panic time, who coaches when coaches get ejected and a continued fascination with an ex-Raptor big man

10 Things: With Nick Nurse fired, Masai Ujiri now becomes the focus with Raptors

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10 Things: With Nick Nurse fired, Masai Ujiri now becomes the focus with Raptors


Celebrations and roster moves and the Raptors turn of fortunes in Ye Olde Mailbag

The Boxing Day addition includes players not reporting after trades, who from the past would fit best and, an usual, a couple of Serge Ibaka questions

10 Things: With Nick Nurse fired, Masai Ujiri now becomes the focus with Raptors

Ye Olde Mailbag: Much consternation about the present and future Raptors

Plus some roster questions, Justin Champagnie and Pascal Siakam's future




10 Things: With Nick Nurse fired, Masai Ujiri now becomes the focus with Raptors


Ye Olde Mailbag:Talking Raptors trade ideas, future moves and how to salvage this season

Plus some lists and thoughts on the proliferation of gambling that's taking some fun away from the actual sports

10 Things: With Nick Nurse fired, Masai Ujiri now becomes the focus with Raptors

Ye Olde Mailbag: Raptors contracts and travel and leadership

Toss in a unique pucks question and which young NBA players might pan out best and there's lots to digest




10 Things: With Nick Nurse fired, Masai Ujiri now becomes the focus with Raptors


Ye Olde Mailbag: Raptors roster, Raptors trade ideas, Raptors playing time

And whither the Warriors, losing close games and who out there in the NBA might be available

10 Things: With Nick Nurse fired, Masai Ujiri now becomes the focus with Raptors

Ye Olde Mailbag: The Raptors at the NBA trade deadline (still) and how players develop

Plus the loss of a familiar U.S. college basketball voice and mental wellness help available to the players. And Batman, the best one

10 Things: With Nick Nurse fired, Masai Ujiri now becomes the focus with Raptors

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