Ottawa Citizen

NBA champs out to prove the doubters wrong

Head coach reminds critics that his team has depth, talent — and can play defence

- mganter@postmedia.com MIKE GANTER Toronto

On the eve of their first meaningful game since March 9, it doesn’t feel like the Toronto Raptors are even on the radar when the basketball world discusses NBA title contenders.

The defending champs are a mere side note to the two Los Angeles teams, the Lakers and Clippers, and the Eastern Conference favourite Milwaukee Bucks. Two of those three teams — the Clippers being the exception — owned better records through the 64 games that were played before the coronaviru­s hijacked our collective sense of normal. Those teams should be favoured.

But there are also those who have both the Boston Celtics and Philadelph­ia 76ers, two teams the Raptors outshone in the pre-pandemic portion of the schedule, ranked ahead of Toronto, as well.

It makes no sense.

Fortunatel­y, the Raptors themselves have their own strong opinions about where they stand in the pecking order of teams that have a shot at hoisting the Larry O’Brien Trophy in mid-October, and they happen to believe they’re right at the top of that list.

And it’s not just the belief that they’ve been there, so they can do it again.

The players on this team — a team that no longer boasts a world-class talent in Kawhi Leonard or a world-class threeand-D guy in Danny Green — know the talent they do have is enough to get them to the top of the mountain again, even without those two superb individual­s.

“We have a group of profession­als who go out there and know their jobs and understand their roles, and I think that’s one thing I will say we have: true profession­als and guys who want to win and continue to chase what we want to get again, and that’s to get a trophy at the end of this season,” Raptors point guard Kyle Lowry said. “For us, it’s about being us and continue trying to grow in these next eight games and pushing forward in the next months of playoffs.”

Serge Ibaka, a guy who has embraced his role and sacrificed personal success for team achievemen­ts as much as any player on this roster, sees a team that possesses a collective inner confidence that can’t be shaken. A group that doesn’t hear the outside “noise” or let it get in the way of what they know they can accomplish.

Ibaka has no doubt the Raptors are prepared to make another championsh­ip run.

“Mentally, as a team, I think we’re ready, because one good thing about us is that we’ve been playing (together) for so long,” he said.

And as much as we always want to make it about talent, as Marc Gasol says so consistent­ly, it’s not about who has the most talent, but who has the best team — and the two are often quite different.

A returning group that includes Lowry, Ibaka, Fred VanVleet, Pascal Siakam, Gasol, OG Anunoby and Norm Powell at the front of the rotation has the luxury of instant chemistry most teams can’t come close to matching.

There’s a familiarit­y there that breeds confidence and that in turn brings success.

“I guess we have that confidence in us now, after last year, we believe in us,” Ibaka said.

“It’s our confidence, nobody can take that from us. We trust each other, we know what to do to win, so I think that’s important. No matter what’s going around out there, whatever they’re saying, I think that’s one thing they cannot take from us is our confidence, the confidence we have now, and how we live with each other, how we know how to play with each other.”

Head coach Nick Nurse has often been asked about overcoming the loss of Leonard.

But on Thursday, when a nonNorth American member of the media asked him why he thought the Raptors could win it all again, he gave a very succinct answer.

“Well, we like to think we’re pretty good, right,” Nurse said.

And despite all the hype about LeBron James and Anthony Davis in Lakers colours together or the giant strides Giannis Antetokoun­mpo took even after an MVP season a year ago, that’s the very reason the vast majority of the NBA is underselli­ng the Raptors as a strong contender to repeat.

Few are able to get past the ‘Kawhi is no longer here’ narrative.

Nurse has no issue reminding them what’s in Toronto.

“We’ve got some special players. I think we’ve got a good combinatio­n of experience with some energetic youth, I think we play defence and we really like to play defence,” he said.

“If you play defence at a level that we’re capable of doing it, you can go a long way in any season.

“And again, the (special qualities) of Lowry, VanVleet and Gasol, and Siakam, and Ibaka when he gets blocking shots and making shots, and OG is playing. Terence Davis, our rookie is going to come out there and bang in some shots, and Norm Powell ... It’s a good group of guys. We’ve got some toughness and we love to play and we love to compete. We’re looking forward to being able to do what we do out there and we think we’re hard to beat.”

Rest assured Nurse and his players know themselves better than anyone on the outside looking in.

 ?? RUSSELL ISABELLA ?? Raptors guard Kyle Lowry drives on Jazz guard Joe Ingles during action back on March 9 in Utah — the last meaningful game for Toronto’s NBA team. Lowry says the Raptors are a highly profession­al group who will use the next eight games to prepare for another championsh­ip run.
RUSSELL ISABELLA Raptors guard Kyle Lowry drives on Jazz guard Joe Ingles during action back on March 9 in Utah — the last meaningful game for Toronto’s NBA team. Lowry says the Raptors are a highly profession­al group who will use the next eight games to prepare for another championsh­ip run.
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