The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Raptors comfortabl­e as favourites

- BY DAN RALPH

It’s been an unpreceden­ted playoff start for Dwane Casey and the Toronto Raptors.

For the first time in its history, Toronto boasts a 2-0 series lead following its 130-119 win Tuesday night over the Washington Wizards.

The Raptors began with a 114-106 Game 1 victory on Saturday, the first time they’d won a playoff opener since 2001.

Traditiona­lly, nothing has come easily in the post-season for the Raptors. Suddenly, they find themselves in unchartere­d waters as an overwhelmi­ng favourite to win a playoff series.

It’s a role Casey feels Toronto, which finished atop the Eastern Conference with a 59-23 record, is comfortabl­e with.

“A few years ago, we had to have that (underdog) mentality, that chip on our shoulder mentality, or else,” Casey said Wednesday. “So, we’re growing, I think our guys are developing a mental toughness that you have to have to be the favourite.

“I think our guys are very comfortabl­e in that role, I’m comfortabl­e in that role as far as having the mental toughness to be the favourite. I think it coincides with the growth and establishi­ng ourselves as a top seed of the conference.”

Action now shifts to Washington, with the third game in the best-of-seven series scheduled for Friday night. Game 4 will go Sunday.

Toronto has been dominant thus far, averaging a playoffhig­h 122 points per game. The Raptors have also hit 29 threepoint­ers (first overall) and are averaging 7.5 blocks while shooting 52.4 per cent from the field.

Toronto’s early success at the Air Canada Centre isn’t surprising given it was 34-7 at home. But the Raptors head to Washington boasting more road wins (25) than the Wizards have home victories (23).

“It’s going to be a hostile environmen­t,” Casey said. “They’re going to be playing in a desperate mode, we’ve got to continue to be hungry, we’ve got to continue to go in with a fighter’s mentality to start the game as we did at home.”

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