National Post

Casey leads Raps in a fortunate 500

NBA club has come far under coach’s watch

- Ryan Wolstat rwolstat@postmedia.com Twitter. com/ WolstatSun

When Dwane Casey agreed to leave the Dallas Mavericks for one of the league’s sadsack franchises in Toronto only days after finally winning an NBA championsh­ip back in the summer of 2011, he knew he was taking on an immense challenge.

What Casey — and everyone else — did not know was that he’d still be at the helm of the Raptors all these years later, having played a considerab­le role in turning a profitable but rarely competitiv­e franchise into a consistent Eastern Conference power.

Casey coached his 500th game with the club on Sunday against Sacramento. He is easily the best head coach in team history, well in front of anybody else in terms of wins, winning percentage and playoff appearance­s and victories.

When Casey, a basketball lifer who helped design the Dallas defence that neutralize­d LeBron James and the Miami Heat in that 2011 final, ventured north of the border, Toronto was the only active franchise without a 50- win season to its credit, had missed the post- season for three straight years, had never won a seven- game playoff series and was perhaps best known in hoops circles as the franchise that had lost headliners Damon Stoudamire, Tracy McGrady, Vince Carter and Chris Bosh. The previous two editions of the Raptors had surrendere­d 113 points per 100 possession­s, truly ghastly marks considerin­g that era came before the current threepoint explosion.

Toronto had long been viewed as a nightly punching bag, an ill- configured group to pad stats against.

His top scoring option was Andrea Bargnani and his best prospect was a raw DeMar DeRozan, who showed few signs at the time that he would grow into one of the more fundamenta­lly sound players around. Behemoths Aaron Gray and Jamaal Magloire manned the middle and Jonas Valanciuna­s was a year away from leaving Lithuania for the NBA.

The 2011-12 season was a lockout- shortened campaign. Casey’s first game was on Boxing Day, in snowy Cleveland. Kyrie Irving and Tristan Thompson made their Cleveland debuts that day. The end result was a 104- 96 victory for the Raptors.

Casey says he only has a vague recollecti­on of that first one, but he is proud of the work he has done.

Few sporting cliches arise as commonly as the concept of changing the culture. Still, it was Job 1 for Casey and his staff, a group that changed over the years both because of management decisions and due to coaches wanting to go elsewhere, and there definitely is a different aura around the organizati­on nowadays. Seasons of 48, 49, 51 and 56 wins, including a trip to the conference finals, will do that.

Heading into Monday’s late game against the Los Angeles Clippers, Toronto was surrenderi­ng only 103.1 points per 100 possession­s, good for ninth in the NBA, while scoring 111.1 per 100, which trails only Golden State and Houston.

Only five teams have won more games so far this season, even though the Raptors’ schedule has been one of the most challengin­g.

“It doesn’t ( feel like 500 games, but) it’s been a good journey,” Casey said, cracking the faintest of smiles, particular­ly when he mentioned the old teams being 30th in defence.

“Getting the program to where it is today from where it was is something I take pride in, and I know our staff takes pride in.”

Now a perennial all- star, DeRozan is the only player remaining from the first Casey- l ed Raptors squad ( Magloire i s now on the coaching staff ).

When DeRozan speaks about his longtime bench boss, he does so with a clear reverence for the Kentucky native.

“It’s been a long, long, long journey. It’s a testament to him sticking to all of his guns and understand­ing his principles that he came in here (with),” DeRozan said.

“Look at him now. He holds the record for wins and games coached, everything — you’ve got to give him credit for that.”

It hasn’t always been easy. Casey has been on the firing line. There have been playoff disappoint­ments. Yet the successes far outweigh the failures.

He has been hard on Valanciuna­s at times in an effort to help the big man adapt to the changing game, and often yanks him out of contests when he can’t keep up, but clearly there are no hard feelings.

“Always you face some ups and downs, some bumps, some downhills, but if you are able to get back and if you are able to stay strong over those bumps, you are real then,” Valanciuna­s said of Casey’s work as head coach. “He knows what he’s doing. He’s a great dude, a great guy. He’s humble, he’s trying to win — that’s all that matters.”

Kyle Lowry has butted heads with Casey over the years, but there is a clear mutual respect.

“I don’t think our coach is ever happy, honestly,” Lowry said after Casey had picked out some things he didn’t like about Sunday’s win over the Kings.

“But that’s the one thing about our coach — he’s hard on us and he’s tough on us, but we know that he wants us to be a championsh­ipcalibre team, and that’s what we push for, and that’s why we respond to him so well.”

 ?? MATTHEW STOCKMAN / GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? Dwane Casey coached his 500th game with the Toronto Raptors on Sundawy in Sacramento, Calif. When Casey became head coach in 2011, the Raptors had yet to record a 50-win season or win a seven-game playoff series.
MATTHEW STOCKMAN / GETTY IMAGES FILES Dwane Casey coached his 500th game with the Toronto Raptors on Sundawy in Sacramento, Calif. When Casey became head coach in 2011, the Raptors had yet to record a 50-win season or win a seven-game playoff series.

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