National Post (National Edition)

Raptors operating on all cylinders

TEAM’S NEW BLUEPRINT FOR SUCCESS PAYING HUGE DIVIDENDS

- MIKE GANTER mike.ganter@sunmedia.ca

Dwane Casey’s default setting in his conversati­ons with the media after a thorough win like Wednesday’s 129-111 thrashing of the Hornets in Charlotte is a hope to “bottle” what the Raptors did right to use at a later date.

In fact Wednesday was basically the blueprint for the kind of success Casey and team president Masai Ujiri and their respective staffs had in mind during the off-season when the popular buzz words were culture change and nothing was untouchabl­e.

Ujiri and Co. wanted more ball movement and ball sharing. Wednesday in Charlotte, the Raptors had a season best 35 assists.

There was also the call was for more emphasis on the three-point shot. Wednesday in Charlotte, the team converted a season high 16 threes on 33 attempts.

Underlying all of this was the desire of not being so reliant on just two players named Kyle Lowry and DeMar DeRozan and while both figured in Wednesday’s win, as they do every game, they were just a part of it.

Anyone choosing to load up on either player in Charlotte paid the price. Everyone was in on this win from the 10th man off the bench in Delon Wright on up.

It says something about how good those in charge believe this team can be that Casey spent a good portion of his post game lamenting the lack of defensive focus in garbage time in a game the Raptors had well in hand by a 20-point margin.

“No question,” Casey said when this new higher standard was pointed out. “I thought we had a good defensive game going up to that point and we came in with a lackadaisi­cal ‘you shoot, I’ll shoot’ attitude and we’re not going to tolerate that from young guys coming into the league.”

But as ticked off as he was by his youngsters mailing it in over the final few minutes, not even an angry Casey could object to the suggestion that this was exactly the kind of game the franchise envisioned for itself way back in the summer when they first started floating the philosophi­cal changes that were to come.

“It’s one game and, again, we’re fighting for consistenc­y and we’ll take the 35 assists and continue to be consistent with it,” Casey said somewhat grudgingly.

There was just so much to like about this particular game.

You saw further evidence that OG Anunoby, the soft-spoken, but fearless rookie is going to be that 3-and-D guy Ujiri has been trying to locate since he arrived. Injuries kept DeMarre Carroll from filling that role but Anunoby in just the 29th game of his NBA career and 17th start is already looking like he’ll fill the role Carroll could not.

His 20-point night which included a 6-for-7 night from behind the arc was a career high but he’s much more than just an offensive threat from the corner.

Anyone who witnessed Anunoby get two hands on the same basketball Dwight Howard did and then basically rag-doll the Hornets centre who has three inches, 33 pounds and 13 years of experience on the younger Anunoby couldn’t help but walk away impressed.

Anunoby outmuscled and outwrestle­d Howard so badly he left him in a heap on the baseline. Not that the young man needs any more confidence in his game, but if he was at all hesitant about his place in the league before that particular play, he dispelled those doubts in a big way.

Serge Ibaka is no rookie, but he was certainly playing like one Wednesday after resting Sunday’s game against Sacramento. Ibaka, for the better part of a few weeks now, is finally looking comfortabl­e both in the system he is playing and the people surroundin­g him.

Ibaka, and this goes for Anunoby as well, is getting wide-open looks with teams focusing on DeRozan and Lowry and both he and the rookie are making opponent’s pay.

Ibaka looks like a different player these past few weeks and if can maintain that, it gives the Raptors three excellent scoring options rather than just the two they’ve been trying to get by with for the past four seasons or so.

And then there’s centre Jonas Valanciuna­s. The Lithuanian big man didn’t get in on the offensive hysterics Wednesday, but he was pivotal in negating the only real offensive option the Hornets have had with any consistenc­y of late.

All Valanciuna­s did was lock up Dwight Howard, holding him to just a pair of free throws while he was on him in the game and frustratin­g him to no end. Howard isn’t accustomed to being manhandled but with Valanciuna­s as the primary defender with help from Ibaka and even Anunoby when need be, he was bottled up and made insignific­ant by the Toronto defenders, Valanciuna­s in particular.

It was only one game, but it was the type of game that has people wondering how far they can go. nationalpo­st.com

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada