National Post

Raptors fight back to end Chicago jinx

- Mike Ganter mganter@postmedia.com

A streak that long could only be broken by something as unpredicta­ble as what transpired Tuesday night at the Air Canada Centre.

Down by 16 when Serge Ibaka and Robin Lopez did their Mike Tyson impression­s and got tossed from the game, the Raptors looked dead and buried and on their way to a 12th consecutiv­e loss to a Chicago Bulls team that time and again has found a way to be Toronto’s nemesis.

It took a near career high 42 points from DeMar DeRozan to pull this one out, which the Raptors did by the slimmest of margins, finally ending the Bulls’ dominance with a 122-120 overtime win.

DeRozan gave the Raptors their first lead of the night with 1: 30 to go in OT as he knocked down an 18- footer over Rajon Rondo.

But it would take a Patrick Patterson put back off a DeRozan miss, then a clutch 20- footer from Cory Joseph to finish it off.

For a game that began with such putrid defence on Toronto’s part, it has to be noted that without the stops engineered by a grouping that included DeRozan, Joseph, Fred Van Vleet, Patterson and especially P. J. Tucker, this win doesn’t happen.

That they came into the game having lost to this Bulls team 11 times in a row, not having tasted victory since New Year’s Eve 2013, just made the comeback that followed that much more unbelievab­le.

But come back the Raptors did, getting back on even terms with 1:50 to go in regulation on a Joseph drive.

Jimmy Butler, the one constant in all 11 Toronto losses to Chicago, looked like he just might sink the Raptors again, scoring on back to back possession­s after the Raptors pulled even to stretch Chicago’s lead back to four points.

But DeRozan, another constant in all 11 of those losses, had a little something left even after doing the majority of the offensive work to get Toronto back in this one.

DeRozan scored 22 in the second half, every bucket he produced needed as the two teams failed to settle this one in regulation.

The talk after this one will be the third quarter fight between Lopez and Ibaka, an exchange that began when Lopez objected to an Ibaka shove as he tried to gain position for a potential rebound. Lopez turned and slapped the ball out of the hands of Ibaka, who then pushed back at Lopez. Lopez threw a right that missed wildly, while Ibaka’s return right just caught the side of Lopez’ head.

There was lots of pushing and shoving after that and an exchange between Raps assistant Jamaal Magloire and Nikola Mirotic that earned double technicals.

The lasting effect, though, will come today when the Raptors learn how long they will be without Ibaka, a guy who has become extremely important in everything the Raptors do at both ends of the floor in the very short time he has been a member of the Raptors.

Punches, actual closed-fist punches, don’t get thrown around in today’s NBA, so even with minimal contact there is going to be some form of suspension.

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