National Post (National Edition)

Gasol trade shows Raptors are in win-now mode

BIG LITHUANIAN BRINGS IMPRESSIVE PEDIGREE TO TORONTO

- Sstinson@postmedia.com Twitter.com/scott_stinson

For a fevered few minutes there on Thursday afternoon, it looked like the NBA trade deadline music would stop and Masai Ujiri would still be looking for a chair.

The Philadelph­ia 76ers had already added Tobias Harris earlier in the week, giving them a terrific starting five if not much of a bench at all. And then a little after midday the Milwaukee Bucks jumped in, pilfering sweet-shooting big man Nikola Mirotic from the New Orleans Pelicans for roster flotsam and draft picks, an addition that will make the Eastleadin­g Bucks even more of a handful than the Toronto Raptors have already found them to be.

It was flop-sweats time for Raptors fans and, even if they might not admit, for Ujiri and GM Bobby Webster and everyone else in the Toronto front office. They had built a team that at the start of this season looked very much like an Eastern Conference contender, perhaps even a title contender if things broke correctly, and now here there were stuck watching everyone else around them getting better. When so much of the sales pitch to pending free agent Kawhi Leonard relied on the Raptors having a long playoff run this spring — well, that and the extra Us$50-million they can offer him — it was starting to look like the team might have a hell of a time trying to get out of the second round again.

They still might. But the Raptors’ own prospects were also significan­tly improved on Thursday with the trade with Memphis for centre Marc Gasol, a move that sent centre Jonas Valanciuna­s, guards Delon Wright and C.J. Miles, and a second-round draft pick for five years from now to the Grizzlies.

It was, at a stroke, a trade that signalled a couple of things: that the Raptors are in win-now mode as much as they have ever been, but also that Ujiri and company aren’t so desperate to load up for this coming playoff run that they were willing to part with assets that they know they need to keep if things don’t work out as they hope over the next four months or so. They retained their two prized young forwards, Pascal Siakam and OG Anunoby, both of whom would be expected to be the centrepiec­es of a rebuild effort should the Raptors’ fortunes go pear-shaped sometime between April and July.

In parting ways with Valanciuna­s, the Raptors lose a genuinely likable big man, a guy who had become a franchise great somewhat by virtue of having been a long-serving member of the team during the best era in its history. But he was never an all-star, and as much as he improved his game over the years he was rarely on the court in crunch time. They also lose Wright and Miles, the former a talented guy who does all the little things right but struggled to find a define role on a deep team, and the latter a mercenary shooter who has unfortunat­ely struggled this season to shoot. Oh, and that 2024 draft pick, by which time we could all be kneedeep in rising seas, so whatever.

All of which is to say, the Raptors lost two guys who hadn’t been key pieces all season and one in Valanciuna­s who was replaced by someone who is significan­tly better at the same position. Gasol, while at 34, is eight years older than the big Lithuanian, is a three-time all-star, two-time ALL-NBA, and a former Defensive Player of the Year. He scores, he rebounds, he passes, he even shoots threes. He’s the best centre the Raptors have ever had, just like that. In landing him, Toronto went from a team that was being passed as it stood still to striding aggressive­ly back into the Eastern Conference race, otherwise known as the fight to be pantsed by the Golden State Warriors in the Finals.

After the Raptors were eliminated by the Cleveland Cavaliers in the playoffs last season, there was a point this summer in which it appeared a new coach would be the only significan­t change to the group that kept getting punched right in the face by Lebron James and his Infinity Glove in the post-season. But three of the four Raptors who played the most minutes against the Cavs last season — Demar Derozan, Miles, and Valanciuna­s — are now all gone. Four more players from that 13-man roster are also now all former Raptors: Wright, Jakob Poeltl, Lorenzo Brown and Bebe Nogueira. While everyone wondered what Ujiri would do after another embarrassi­ng playoff exit, we now have our answer: He blew it up. It may have taken a little time, but he has turned over more than half the roster, plus the coaching staff, of the best Raptors team that its fans had ever known.

The Raptors are doing all they can to get to the NBA Finals this season, but you already knew that.

 ?? DAVID J. PHILLIP / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Marc Gasol is a three-time all-star, two-time ALL-NBA and a former Defensive Player of the Year.
DAVID J. PHILLIP / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Marc Gasol is a three-time all-star, two-time ALL-NBA and a former Defensive Player of the Year.
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