The Miracle

Raptors’ Ujiri: We need a culture change

- Source: Sportsnet

A 51-win season and a second-round appearance in the post-season wasn’t good enough for Masai Ujiri. And now the Toronto Raptors need a “culture reset,” the team president said, after a post-season that ended in a second-round sweep and saw them looking a “little wide-eyed” against LeBron James and the Cleveland Cavaliers. Ujiri will spend the coming weeks evaluating all facets of the franchise, but what he knows right now is that the Raptors’ style of play, which got them to playoffs in four consecutiv­e seasons, isn’t working anymore and needs to change. And he hopes that change comes with Kyle Lowry on board. “It’s our job to try and get Kyle to come back and do it the best way that we possibly can,” Ujiri said. “We want him back, he has been a huge part of the success here.” The three-time all-star point guard will opt out of the final season of his contract and become a free agent on July 1, and gave no hints Tuesday as to his plans. Speaking to reporters a day after the Raptors cleaned out their lockers, Ujiri called the Cleveland series disappoint­ing, saying “I sometimes feel like that wasn’t our team that we saw out there.” “We are going to hold everybody accountabl­e because we need to. We need to figure it out.” Ujiri, who’d just come from a long morning meeting with coach Dwane Casey, pinpointed the team’s one-on-one playing style. . “Last year 56 (wins), this year 51. So they should hold hands and sing hurrah and kiss, and we win 30 games? What the hell is that doing for anybody? Nothing. Zero,” he said. “Some point guards are like that, tough-minded point guards. Toughminde­d coaches are like that.” The Raptors have four free agents in Lowry, Serge Ibaka, P.J. Tucker and Patrick Patterson, and -- like a domino effect -- many of the big decisions in the next few weeks depends on who stays and who goes. Ujiri said he’ll lay out numerous scenarios for the team’s ownership. He said the owners are “100 per cent” OK with spending the money required. And he’s not opposed to rebuilding, if necessary. “We have to find a way to motivate people, we have to find a way to motivate fans, we have to find a way to play hard on the court, and we have to find a way to find the right talent, to make sure that we’re creating a sense of hope in this organizati­on,” Ujiri said. “And no, we’re not afraid of that at all. Because it might be the right way to go, you never know.” The culture shift will see him aim the magnifying glass at virtually every part of the organizati­on. “We have done things here for four years and we have had a level of success but how do you take it to another level is what I’m talking about. We have to dig deep into everything we do. And I’m talking scouting, I’m talking our medical department, I’m talking everything,” he said. “I think we are on a good scale in the NBA, but how do you get better? We can’t just pinpoint coaching. We can’t just pinpoint not making shots. Our attitude, our leadership, everything. The way we work together. “I think those things we need to re-visit and then get on with it.”

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