Edmonton Journal

Valanciuna­s takes on all comers, big and small

- MIKE GANTER mganter@postmedia.com

Jonas Valanciuna­s was a little more tired than normal after Tuesday’s win over the Brooklyn Nets.

But he wasn’t complainin­g. He knows he doesn’t have anyone to blame for the added fatigue but the guy who looks at himself in the mirror every morning. Valanciuna­s brought this on himself and he couldn’t be happier.

It used to be a familiar pattern when an opponent would start to realize they couldn’t match Toronto’s lineup on the floor and try to junk up the game by sending in a small lineup.

Invariably Raptors coach Dwane Casey would respond in like fashion matching small with small and sending Valanciuna­s to the bench until the opponent put out a matchup Casey felt his own big man could guard.

The Nets, because they are young, and because their bigs aren’t exactly good or healthy right now, go small a lot. They did so in January when the Raptors last visited the Nets at the Barclays Center, putting Quincy Acy at the five and Casey quickly hooked Valanciuna­s in response.

There was no hook for Valanciuna­s Tuesday night.

Valanciuna­s came out and went back in every time Casey started subbing out his starters for rest and rest only. It’s a clear indication of how much trust he has in his big centre these days.

He’ll never be fleet of foot, but Valanciuna­s, through experience and with a little help from a defensive tweak that has him sitting a little deeper in the paint on pick and rolls than he previously had been, is now a competent defender in the very situations teams previously exploited him.

But that’s not all that went into Valanciuna­s finally putting an end to those quick hooks every time a team went small.

He set himself up for better success against smalls by coming in about 10 pounds lighter than he had been in previous seasons.

He has also studied and worked with the coaching staff to find ways to compensate for the speed disadvanta­ge he is at when teams go small.

And most of all he has put in the work that when he does have to chase around guys half his size and keep them off the rim, the conditioni­ng is there that he’s capable of sustaining those efforts for long periods.

“I hope we are going to do more and more (of that),” Valanciuna­s said. “I feel much more comfortabl­e guarding smalls. It’s not about offence. Take advantage on offence. This is what I’m going to do anyway. Big body so I rebound. That’s my stuff. But the question is about the defence. I get more and more comfortabl­e guarding the smalls.

“As the season goes (my teammates) get more comfortabl­e just leaning in and sending them to me. I take it at the basket and I just go vertical and clean up the basket.”

Valanciuna­s admits it isn’t always easy keeping pace with men 30 or 40 pounds lighter than he is, but he doesn’t complain.

“Chasing the smalls up top and being physical down low, yeah, it takes some energy,” he said. “But that’s fine.” Valanciuna­s is a big part of the Raptors’ rebounding game, which has been one of the team’s weaker points. When he is out and Casey goes small matching opponents, that part of Toronto’s game falls off dramatical­ly.

So Casey correctly deduced it was in his best interest to see how far Valanciuna­s has come to guarding smalls.

“It was a concerted effort,” Casey said of Tuesday’s game.

“We wanted to make sure we gave him an opportunit­y to guard on the perimeter ... he is doing a much better job of doing that. He had some breakdowns, they outran him two or three times but still the only way to get experience is to leave him out there. These are the type of games he has to learn and I thought he did a better job in the second half.”

Valanciuna­s points out his improvemen­t is also partially due to a defensive tweak and how he and his teammates have executed it.

“We pick our spots and see what is working for us and get more and more comfortabl­e doing it,” Valanciuna­s said of the approach. “I think we are in pretty good shape guarding five smalls with a big on (the floor).”

And not to be discounted in staying with that approach, on offence Valanciuna­s has the same kind of advantage a smaller, quicker team has on him at the other end.

“Seven foot versus 6-7, 6-8,” Casey said. “He has a little height advantage.”

And Valanciuna­s used that advantage to score a teamhigh 26 points and pull down 14 boards, four of them off the other team’s glass.

Numbers like those will be very welcome come playoff time should opponents choose to tempt fate and go small against the Raptors.

 ?? KATHY WILLENS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Nets forward Dante Cunningham defends Raptors centre Jonas Valanciuna­s Tuesday in New York.
KATHY WILLENS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Nets forward Dante Cunningham defends Raptors centre Jonas Valanciuna­s Tuesday in New York.
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