National Post (National Edition)

DeRozan’s buy-in looks great now

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“sucks as a friend.” (Pause for effect.) “But as a basketball player he’s really good.”

DeRozan was then asked about how he had approached Game 2, which began with him finding open teammates and then turned into the DeMar Show, a 37-point piece of art that showed off the full range of his scoring skills.

Toronto holds a 2-0 series lead following its 130-119 win Tuesday over the Washington Wizards.

“I just let the game come to me,” DeRozan said, and then started to explain that in the new-look Toronto offence, he knows he can facilitate scoring if the opportunit­ies are not there for him to make buckets. “It’s not like I gotta have the mindset to go out there and score 3040 points, I go out there and play agg — ”

Lowry cut him off right in the middle of the word: “You had 37, what do you mean?”

DeRozan: “I didn’t go out there saying, let me score 30 tonight — ”

Lowry, interrupti­ng again: “I’m just saying, you had 37, don’t say it like that.”

DeRozan: “But I’m saying I didn’t go out — ”

Lowry: “All I’m saying is you can’t say that when you had37—”

DeRozan: “Listen, what I’m trying to explain!”

It went on like that for a while, like an old married couple or a pair of morningdri­ve radio hosts: DeRo and The Kyle on 97.5 The Dino. This is, to put it mildly, not normally how post-playoff news conference­s have gone with the Raptors.

As goofy as the whole thing was, DeRozan was actually making sense. Or was trying to make sense, until he kept getting cut off. The shooting guard has spent many nights in his playoff career firing jump shots with

Coach Dwane Casey said on Wednesday that it took some time for DeRozan to feel comfortabl­e in the new system. He said he had a sit-down with both starting guards after a game in Utah, when the season was just two weeks old. “They just hadn’t got a feel for it yet, they hadn’t got a real understand­ing of when they were going to get their shots, when they were going to get their touches,” Casey said.

He said he implored them to buy in to the new system, and they agreed to stick with it. three pointers than anyone other than C.J. Miles.

“You take any star player in this league and tell them to change their style of play to fit the team, it’s a commendabl­e thing for him. It’s not easy to do,” Casey said.

Not that the job is fully complete; DeRozan did still attempt a couple of 21-foot two-pointers in Game 2. “If he could just step back a few inches, and he’d get those threes,” Casey said. “It’s not a finished product with him.”

That all this change has come in a year of personal challenges is only more impressive. DeRozan revealed his own battles with depression this season, and his father, Frank, has had serious health problems.

“To me, he’s like a son as far as just watching him grow up in the last seven years from a snotty-nosed kid in Compton to the man he is now, and taking on the family responsibi­lity he’s taking on and still playing,” Casey said.

The elder DeRozan sent the team a video message from his hospital bed recently. “I mean, it brought tears to my eyes, anyway, to let the team know that he was pulling for the team,” Casey said. “DeMar, he’s doing a great job for what he’s going through in his personal life.”

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